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President Donald Trump is facing a brutal reality check in the numbers, with his critics now outnumbering his supporters by a wide margin. Pollsters are recording a fresh peak in public unhappiness with his second term, and the latest surveys suggest that skepticism about his leadership is hardening rather than fading. For a president who has long treated polling as a scoreboard, the new disapproval high is more than a bad headline, it is a warning light.
The shift is not happening in a vacuum. After nearly a year back in office, fatigue with constant political combat, anxiety over immigration crackdowns, and doubts about economic stewardship are all converging. The result is a political climate in which Trump’s base still cheers loudly, but the rest of the country is increasingly tuning him out.
Polls converge on a sour public mood
The clearest sign of the turn against President Donald Trump is a new survey showing his critics at their strongest position yet. In that poll, President Donald Trump’s disapproval rating is reported at 63%, a level that would leave little doubt about how the broader public feels about his performance. For a White House that has leaned heavily on claims of momentum and success, that figure undercuts the idea that the country is rallying behind the president’s agenda.
Other data points line up with that bleak picture. One national measure of job performance has Trump’s approval at 44%, with support among a Republican audience at a robust 85%, but that still leaves a majority of the country on the other side of the ledger. Another national poll focused on economic management finds that 54% of respondents disapprove of how President Trump is handling the economy, a striking verdict for a leader who has long sold himself as a business expert.
Zooming out, the trend lines look even rougher. A broad review of surveys, Updated January, notes that Donald Trump’s net approval has slid over his first year back in office, with particular erosion on immigration. Another national snapshot from Donald Trump tracking shows that a large share of Americans hold an unfavourable view of him, echoing the idea that his political ceiling remains stubbornly low. When one respected historical comparison notes that The Gallup poll has his approval at 36 percent, it drives home how far he has fallen compared with most modern presidents.
Immigration, the economy, and the erosion of trust
Under the hood of those topline numbers, the story is about trust slipping away on the very issues Trump once treated as his calling card. On immigration, Jan Trump built his brand on hardline promises and aggressive deportation rhetoric, but the public mood has shifted. A detailed look at attitudes finds that his approval on immigration has sagged, with one survey showing his overall rating dropping to 37 percent. Another breakdown of opinion, drawn from a separate poll, notes that this slide was largely driven by Republicans who once saw immigration as one of his strongest issues.
The economic picture is not bailing him out either. Jan More detailed questioning in an NBC News poll shows that a majority is uneasy with President Trump’s economic management, tying their concerns to fallout from aggressive deportation efforts and broader instability. Another national snapshot reports that, Despite the administration’s claims of success, Despite the public messaging, Trump’s overall disapproval rating is more than ten points higher than it was earlier in his term, suggesting that the sales pitch is not landing.
Layered on top of that is a broader sense that the country has been here before with him, and not in a good way. Jan Trump’s earlier term was marked by what one long running tracker describes as Dire approval ratings, yet he still managed to get re-elected. That history makes some Republicans confident they can ride out another storm of bad numbers, but the current mix of a Today approval in the high thirties, a 44% overall job rating, and a reported 63% disapproval suggests a deeper weariness. For a president who has always bet that intensity beats breadth, the latest polls hint that the crowd outside the arena is getting larger, and angrier, than the one still cheering inside.