Donald Trump and maga Republicans will experience the voter impact of negative Trumpzism in 2026 elections
Trump Started 2025 Strong, Then His Approval Rating Crashed
Echo published in The Intelligencer by Ed Kilgore:
Donald Trump’s (🤥as usual) false ❗claims 🙄😡about💢 a landslide victory and a huge mandate in 2024, were always ridiculous. Nevertheless he began his second term with some of the highest job-approval ratings he’s ever had as president.
Yet, per Gallup polling, he never hit 50 percent job approval during his first term, but Silver Bulletin’s refined polling averages showed him at 51.6 percent the day after his second inauguration.
With a disapproval rating of 40 percent, that gave him a double-digit positive net approval rating of 11.6 percent. His net approval stayed positive until early March, going underwater on March 12, and staying there for the rest of the year.
Trump’s poll numbers took a big plunge in April around the time he imposed his “Liberation Day” tariffs.At this point in 2017, during Trump’s first term, Gallup had his job approval at 36 percent, precisely where Gallup shows him today.
Obviously, Trump has always had a polarizing effect on Americans. But Silver Bulletin’s tracking of strong approval versus strong disapproval shows the latter consistently ahead in much of 2025, matching the general erosion of Trump’s popularity.
Since June, Trump has been underwater in assessments of his job performance on all four major issues tracked by Silver Bulletin’s polling averages. His net approval is currently at minus-8.3 percent on immigration, minus-20.5 percent on trade, minus-21.3 percent on the economy, and minus-28.8 percent on inflation.
Unsurprisingly, specific polling outlets have different takes on Trump’s popularity. But overall, the downward 2025, trend shows up nearly everywhere.
Tracking presidential job approval by party affiliation is a bit difficult due to differences in ways of determining such affiliation.
How will Trump’s loss of popularity affect the 2026, midterm elections❓ It won’t help, obviously, if he continues to lose ground. Gallup showed his 2018, job-approval rating at 39 percent in January and 40 percent in November, when his party lost 41 House seats. But the usual low-turnout midterm electorate is slightly less aligned with overall public opinion than the high-turnout presidential electorate. Another factor is that, while Trump has been and remains unpopular, the Democratic Party’s approval ratings aren’t great either (though typically midterms are referenda on the president’s party more than choices between competing parties).
The polling number that most corresponds to midterm vote intentions is the so-called generic congressional ballot, which simply asks respondents which party they want to control the U.S. House of Representatives. According to RealClearPolitics’ polling averages, Democrats currently lead on the generic ballot by 3.7 percent. Decision Desk HQ’s averages put the Democratic advantage at 5.3 percent. The two parties were very nearly tied on the generic ballot prior to the 2024 election, in which Republicans eked out the fragile House majority they still have today.
Of course, unexpected things could happen between now and November 2026 ,that might change the currently strong odds that Democrats will at least flip the House and make gains in the Senate. With gerrymandering still underway, we don’t even know exactly what the landscape will look like. It is reasonable to presume that Trump is more likely to be a drag on his party than a boon, based on everything we know about the negative public attitudes toward him over time. Donald Trump is obviously just not a very popular politician, and those who love him fiercely get only one vote.
Labels: Ed Kilgore, Gallup polling, Joe Biden, Silver Bulletin, The Intelligencer


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