For weeks, Washington insiders had been whispering that the next set of presidential polls would be troubling. Not just slightly bad — but historically bad. Now, the results are in, and depending on who you ask, the numbers either confirm what critics have long warned or highlight how sharply divided the nation remains under Donald J. Trump’s second presidency.
Nine months into his return to the Oval Office, Trump has governed with the same intensity that defined his first term — and then some. Executive orders have poured out in rapid succession, trade deals have shifted overnight, and immigration enforcement has toughened. His cabinet has seen turnover, his rallies have multiplied, and his feud with the mainstream press has reignited. To his supporters, this is proof that he’s a fighter. To his critics, it’s a sign that America’s political wounds are deepening.
The president has brushed off criticism with typical bravado. Asked by reporters if he would consider softening his tone, he replied, “You don’t fix a broken country by whispering. You do it by shouting truth louder than the lies.” Yet behind the scenes, aides have grown uneasy. The latest YouGov national survey shows Trump’s approval rating has fallen to 41%, with 52% of Americans disapproving — his lowest point since returning to office. Among independents, approval sits at just 32%. Even among Republicans, support has dipped slightly, from 87% to 82%.
Perhaps most striking is where the erosion is taking place. Once-reliable strongholds like Ohio, Iowa, and Florida are showing signs of fatigue. In Ohio, Trump’s approval has dropped below 50%. In Florida, a state he carried twice, approval now sits at 49%. Suburban voters who supported him for economic stability in 2024 are voicing frustration over constant political battles. “Voters wanted order,” said political analyst Peter Hartwell. “What they’re seeing is confrontation.”
When confronted with the numbers in a Fox News interview, Trump dismissed them as “fake polls” from “bad pollsters.” On Truth Social, he doubled down: “The media doesn’t measure success; the people feel it. The economy’s stronger, the border’s safer, and America is winning again.” That message resonates with his base, who see his defiance as proof of authenticity. Yet political historians warn that approval ratings below 45% often spell trouble for a president’s agenda — especially heading into midterms, when congressional allies may grow reluctant to take political risks.
Pollsters say the discontent crosses party lines but for different reasons. Among Republicans, tariffs and volatile markets are top concerns. Among Democrats and independents, it’s tone and trust. Sixty-two percent say Trump “stokes division,” while 55% believe he “undermines the rule of law.” Nearly half say they “no longer trust what he says about the economy.” Support among younger voters, minorities, and suburban moderates has fallen sharply, with 72% of voters under 30 now disapproving of his performance.
Still, Trump has never been one to bow to bad news. Instead of retreating, he’s ramping up rallies in battleground states. At a recent event in Pittsburgh, he told the crowd, “They can print all the fake polls they want. You see the truth every day — cheaper gas, safer streets, stronger borders.” The crowd erupted in applause, echoing chants of “Four more years!” For Trump, polls are not reality; rallies are.
His campaign advisors argue the fundamentals are solid — job growth, cooling inflation, and renewed industrial investment. They say dissatisfaction is more about perception than policy. Democrats, meanwhile, see an opening. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer quipped, “Americans are tired of the chaos, not the country.” But Trump, true to form, remains undeterred. Boarding Air Force One this week, he smiled and told reporters, “They say my numbers are down. I say America’s going up.”
Whether that confidence marks political resilience or denial remains uncertain. But as history has shown, betting against Donald Trump has rarely paid off.