Recent Survey Shows Public Sentiment Toward Trump

A Presidency Under Pressure

Public confidence in President Donald Trump has entered one of its most fragile phases since his return to office.
A recent CNN/SSRS poll of 1,245 adults conducted in late October places his approval rating at 37%, a steep fall from 47% earlier this year. Roughly 63% now disapprove of his performance, reflecting a widening discontent that transcends party lines.

The mood of the nation mirrors that slide. Nearly seven in ten Americans say the United States is doing โ€œpretty badlyโ€ or โ€œvery badly.โ€ Inflation, rising costs, and the sense that daily life has grown harder dominate their concerns. Almost half identify the cost of living as the countryโ€™s most urgent problem. Another large share points to threats against democracy. Only a small fraction see immigrationโ€”once Trumpโ€™s political centerpieceโ€”as the defining issue.

The data point to a deeper erosion of confidence in his leadership. Sixty-one percent of respondents believe Trumpโ€™s policies have hurt the economy. Fifty-six percent say his foreign policy has weakened Americaโ€™s standing abroad. And six in ten now see him as overstepping the limits of executive powerโ€”a warning sign for any president who governs by force of will.

The implications reach beyond polling numbers. With midterm elections approaching, just 21% of voters say they plan to cast ballots in support of Trump, while 41% say they will vote specifically to oppose him. That imbalance suggests an energized opposition and a shrinking core of active defenders.

Trump, for his part, has dismissed the findings as โ€œFake Polls,โ€ insisting that mainstream media distort public perception and that his true backing lies with โ€œreal Americans.โ€ Yet even his supporters quietly acknowledge that the discontent feels broader than beforeโ€”fed not by scandal, but by fatigue.

Whether this downturn marks a passing low or a lasting realignment will depend on what happens next: the trajectory of the economy, the tone of his campaign, and the publicโ€™s appetite for confrontation versus calm.

For now, the numbers capture a country uneasy with its direction and a presidency under mounting pressure to prove that its promise still holds.


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