Trump’s Popularity: #2

Donald Trump’s Popularity: Low and Getting Lower

Here’s a snapshot of how Donald Trump is faring in terms of approval and popularity — both in the U.S. and around the world — and what that might mean.


🇺🇸 Domestic Popularity

  • According to a recent poll by Reuters/Ipsos, just 42% of Americans approve of Trump’s job performance, while 56% disapprove. Reuters+2Reuters+2

  • Another survey from Gallup puts his approval at 40%. Gallup.com+1

  • Among independents, the approval rating is even worse: about 29% approve of his job performance. Gallup.com

  • On key issues:

  • Net approval (approve minus disapprove) is firmly negative—for some polls it’s around –11 points or worse. Newsweek

  • Younger voters, especially millennials and Latinos, have seen sharp declines in support. Newsweek

Bottom Line: Trump’s popularity in the U.S. is weak across much of the electorate, with only about 4 in 10 approving of his performance, and widespread concern about his handling of major issues.


🌍 Global Popularity

Bottom Line: Globally, Trump’s image is marred: in many allied and Western countries the public lacks trust in his international leadership, though in some non-Western or non-democratic contexts his ratings are stronger.


🧭 Why the Low Ratings? Key Drivers

  • Economy & Cost-of-Living: Polls show that Americans are deeply concerned about inflation, prices, and the economy — areas where Trump is getting weak marks. The Associated Press+1

  • Issue-specific Performance: Many of the policy domains where a president is judged (economy, trade, budget, foreign affairs) are seeing low approval for Trump. Gallup.com+1

  • Demographics Shift: Younger voters, minorities (especially Hispanic/Latino voters), and independents are moving away or never strongly supported him. Newsweek

  • Global Perception: Outside the U.S., many are skeptical about his handling of foreign relations, climate change, and multilateral diplomacy — affecting America’s “brand” abroad. Pew Research Center


📝 Implications

  • Domestically, low and negative net approval may signal trouble for upcoming elections (midterms, state contests) and hampers his ability to claim a strong mandate.

  • Internationally, weaker global trust in his leadership could make diplomacy harder, reduce leverage in multilateral forums, and affect U.S. soft power.

  • For his base, Trump remains strong among committed Republicans, but the size of that base may not be sufficient alone if broader public sentiment remains over-whelmingly unfavorable.

  • Governance-wise: When a large portion of the public disapproves of the handling of core issues (economy, trade, budget), room for maneuver becomes narrower and polarisation sharper.


📌 Sample Social-Media Post

Headline: “Why Trump’s Popularity Is So Low — and What It Means”

The latest polling shows that President Donald Trump’s approval rating in the U.S. hovers around 40-42%, with more than half of Americans actively disapproving of his job performance. Among independents and younger voters, the numbers are worse. On key issues like the economy, trade and immigration, his approval is in the high 30s or low 30s.

Internationally, the picture is even more stark: in major Western democracies such as Germany, Sweden and Spain, fewer than 1 in 5 people say they have confidence in his leadership of global affairs.

So why does this matter? Because when a leader lacks broad domestic support and global respect, their ability to govern effectively, negotiate internationally and sustain political momentum is weakened.

Whether you support him or oppose him, the fact is clear: Trump’s popularity is under major strain — and for his agenda to succeed, the numbers will have to improve.