Bombshell New Approval Ratings Reveal What Americans Really Think of Donald Trump
For weeks, whispers in Washington hinted that the next round of presidential approval ratings would be bad. Not just ordinary-bad — historic.
Now, the numbers are in. And the truth, depending on who you ask, either confirms what the media’s been saying for months… or exposes just how divided the United States has become under Donald J. Trump’s second presidency.
But before the numbers even landed, the president already knew what was coming.
A President Under Pressure
Nine months into his second term, Donald Trump has proven that a presidency can be louder, faster, and more relentless the second time around.
He began this term exactly how he ended the first — swinging.
Executive orders. Cabinet shake-ups. Sudden trade reversals. Immigration crackdowns. A war of words with the media, the universities, and the legal establishment.
To his supporters, this is what “America First” looks like in action. To his critics, it’s a rerun of the same chaos that once exhausted a nation.
Either way, Trump has refused to change.
When asked by reporters earlier this month if he planned to “tone it down,” the president’s response was instant:
“You don’t fix a broken country by whispering,” he said. “You do it by shouting truth louder than the lies.”
It was classic Trump — unfiltered, unapologetic, and impossible to ignore.
But behind the scenes, his team was watching something that no rally or slogan could drown out: the polls.
The Numbers Americans Can’t Ignore
According to the latest YouGov national survey, Trump’s overall approval rating has dropped into dangerous territory — the lowest since returning to office.
Only 41% of Americans currently approve of the job he’s doing. 52% disapprove.
That’s a far cry from the post-inauguration optimism that briefly pushed him above 50% last January, when even skeptics admitted his early economic moves looked promising.
Then came the reversals.
The trade fights.
The tariff hikes.
The media battles that seemed to dominate every week.
And the optimism evaporated almost overnight.
Even among Republican voters, once near-total loyalty has started to fracture. YouGov found that 82% of Republicans still support Trump — an impressive number — but it’s five points lowerthan the peak of his first term. Among independents, the picture is brutal: only 32% approve, while nearly two-thirds disapprove.
Those are the numbers that make or break a presidency.
