Donald Trump is the 47 President of US

Trump's latest approval rating on things:
 
Trump pushes Russia-Ukraine deal that gives Putin almost everything he wants.

 

Read from newsweek:

Overall, Trump’s net approval is underwater in most of the country by this measure, despite holding steady among his core supporters.

According to a new state-by-state breakdown, Trump's approval ratings remain positive in several Republican-dominated states, with the highest net approvals in Wyoming (+34 percent), West Virginia (+27 percent), Idaho (+23 percent), North Dakota (+18 percent), Montana (+17 percent), and Oklahoma (+17 percent).

Conversely, the president is experiencing significant disapproval in historically Democratic states, according to the polling.
Hawaii reports a net approval of -55 percent, Vermont sits at -50 percent, Maryland at -44 percent, Massachusetts at -42 percent, California and Rhode Island at -40 percent, and Washington and Oregon at -36 percent. In populous states such as New York (-32 percent) and Illinois (-29 percent), the figures further reinforce national partisan divides.

Trump's net approval stands at -12 percent in Arizona, -13 percent in Pennsylvania, -15 percent in Michigan and Nevada, -14 percent in Georgia, -11 percent in Wisconsin, and -8 percent in North Carolina. Florida, Texas, and Ohio are all at -6 percent, maintaining the pattern of net-negative standings in all major swing states.
 

Attachments

  • Trumpapproval10monthsin.jpg
    Trumpapproval10monthsin.jpg
    46.2 KB · Views: 1
Last edited:
Read From Yahoo News:

Donald Trump’s niece says one “abysmal” survey showing voters souring in record numbers will hit her president uncle the hardest.

It emerged this week that Trump is underwater on job satisfaction with every single pollster in America—including those usually supportive of him.

But Mary Trump, 60, said the numbers that are most likely to alarm the 79-year-old are those from his favorite channel—Fox News.

“Donald’s poll numbers are abysmal,” the psychologist, author, and political commentator said on her YouTube channel, arguing that Fox’s polling—however she views the network—is “rock-solid.”

In that survey, which aired on Fox’s Special Report and was detailed on Fox’s website, 60 percent rated their personal finances only “fair” or “poor,” while 76 percent said the national economy is in bad shape.

Trump himself appeared to acknowledge the slide last week: “My poll numbers just went down, but with smart people they’ve gone way up,” he said, in comments reported by Reuters, whose own survey pegged his job approval at 38 percent, the lowest of his second term.

Mary Trump’s video also seized on Fox’s framing that voters think the White House is doing “more harm than good” on the economy. She added that even core supporters are feeling the pinch. “Yikes is the professional term for that,” anchor Bret Baier said of the numbers in the Fox segment she cited.

The wider polling picture is grim for the president. A J.L. Partners survey conducted Nov. 19–20 found 41 percent approval and 49 percent disapproval, with a 3.2-point margin of error. Marist’s Nov. 19 poll put Democrats up 14 points on the 2026 generic ballot.

Even Rasmussen Reports—a pollster often seen as friendlier to Republicans and excluded from The New York Times’ aggregator—has Trump in trouble. In its Nov. 12–20 survey, 51 percent disapproved of his job performance, while 46 percent approved.

But Mary Trump argued that the Fox data—which aligns with Reuters/Ipsos findings that just 26 percent approve of Trump’s handling of household expenses—will land hardest because it reflects personal finances and day-to-day costs.
 

Trump appears to doze during Cabinet meeting

Secretary of State Marco Rubio was the last person to deliver remarks as members of President Donald Trump’s Cabinet went around the table lavishing praise on their boss Tuesday — a process that took two hours and 17 minutes, by CNN’s count, and appeared to lose the president’s attention multiple times.

Rubio heralded Trump’s “transformational” foreign policy as the president, seated beside him, slouched in his chair, his eyes closed. Then he abruptly shifted, straightened, and looked at the secretary of state.

Moments later, the president’s eyes again appeared to close as Rubio made a joke about the college football playoff season. The Cabinet members around the table loudly laughed. The president, unmoved, barely raised his lips, his eyes fluttering briefly.

Trump narrowed, closed or appeared to close his eyes multiple times throughout the lengthy meeting, including during impassioned remarks by Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and as Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer detailed workforce development efforts. He also seemed to look down at a paper on the table in front of him at times, giving the appearance his eyes were closed.
 

Trump appears to doze during Cabinet meeting

Secretary of State Marco Rubio was the last person to deliver remarks as members of President Donald Trump’s Cabinet went around the table lavishing praise on their boss Tuesday — a process that took two hours and 17 minutes, by CNN’s count, and appeared to lose the president’s attention multiple times.

Rubio heralded Trump’s “transformational” foreign policy as the president, seated beside him, slouched in his chair, his eyes closed. Then he abruptly shifted, straightened, and looked at the secretary of state.

Moments later, the president’s eyes again appeared to close as Rubio made a joke about the college football playoff season. The Cabinet members around the table loudly laughed. The president, unmoved, barely raised his lips, his eyes fluttering briefly.

Trump narrowed, closed or appeared to close his eyes multiple times throughout the lengthy meeting, including during impassioned remarks by Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and as Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer detailed workforce development efforts. He also seemed to look down at a paper on the table in front of him at times, giving the appearance his eyes were closed.

Sleepy donny is up too late complaining.
 
  • Haha
Reactions: cm2

Current US Job market is really bad now because of Trump's Policies. Slowdown in hiring, rising unemployment.
 
Back
Top