His numbers are collapsing, and even his own advisers didn’t see it coming. Five months into his second term, Donald Trump is confronting a brutal political reckoning. Once-reliable strengths like immigration and the economy are now bleeding support, fast. Protests, unrest, and voter fatigue are converging into something far more dangerous than a bad news cycle. The question now is not whether the slide is real, but how far it goes befo… Continues…
Trump’s shrinking approval is more than a rough patch; it’s a warning flare for his entire project. When a president falls below 40 percent, allies grow cautious, opponents grow bolder, and every misstep feels fatal. The Quinnipiac numbers don’t just show discontent with a few decisions—they point to exhaustion with constant crisis, confrontation, and the sense that promised “order” has delivered only more chaos.
Immigration crackdowns that once electrified his base now unfold against images of troops in American streets and escalating protests. Economic unease chips away at his last aura of competence. In this climate, each new controversy lands on a public already primed to doubt him. Whether Trump can reverse the trend matters less than the damage already done: a presidency increasingly defined not by dominance, but by eroding trust and a country quietly turning away.