BRASILIA (Reuters) - The approval rating of Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro’s government is dropping steadily and its negative rating is climbing, a CNI/Ibope poll showed on Friday, as his combative political style and a weak recovery weigh on his popularity.

FILE PHOTO: Brazil's President Jair Bolsonaro looks on as he leaves the Alvorada Palace in Brasilia, Brazil December 12, 2019. REUTERS/Adriano Machado/File Photo

The number of Brazilians that rate his government as great or good has slipped to 29% from 31% in September, while those that view it as bad or terrible have increased to 38% from 34% in the previous poll, the new survey said.

The right-wing government’s positive rating had already declined in Ibope’s four previous polls this year, falling from 35% in April. Its negative rating has risen from 27% in April.

“The continued drop in popularity is Bolsonaro’s own doing. His way of governing and communicating is very aggressive and creates too much noise around the president,” said Leonardo Barreto, head of Brasilia-based consultancy Capital Politico.

Barreto noted, however, that the poll commissioned by industry lobby CNI was carried out Dec. 5-8, before recent data showing Brazil’s economy is definitely on a positive recovery track.

It also polled opinions before the latest developments in a graft investigation of Bolsonaro’s son Senator Flavio Bolsonaro that could undermine the president’s credibility as an anti-corruption crusader, a key factor in his popularity.

Even as Bolsonaro’s poll numbers have dwindled, he is still seen as a strong candidate for re-election in 2022 given a fractured opposition, intense loyalty from his strongest supporters and growing signs of a sustainable economic expansion.

Public confidence in Bolsonaro’s governing style has dropped since he took office in January, the poll said. A majority of those polled, or 53%, do not approve of the way he is governing Brazil, up from 40% in April and 50% in September. Those who approve of his governing style has fallen to 40% from 51% in April and 44% in September.

The number of Brazilians who said they trusted Bolsonaro has also dropped off, within the margin of error, to 41% from 51% in April and 42% in September. Those who have no trust in him rose to 56% from 45% in April and 55% in September.

The survey polled 2,000 people and has a margin of error of plus or minus 1 percentage point.