Fresh Trump Approval Poll Shows What the U.S. Truly Believes

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 “pretty badly” or “very badly.” Inflation, rising costs, and the sense that daily life has grown harder dominate their concerns. Almost half identify the cost of living as the country’s most urgent problem. Another large share points to threats against democracy. Only a small fraction see immigration—once Trump’s political centerpiece—as the defining issue.

The data point to a deeper erosion of confidence in his leadership. Sixty-one percent of respondents believe Trump’s policies have hurt the economy. Fifty-six percent say his foreign policy has weakened America’s standing abroad. And six in ten now see him as overstepping the limits of executive power—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 “Fake Polls,” insisting that mainstream media distort public perception and that his true backing lies with “real Americans.” Yet even his supporters quietly acknowledge that the discontent feels broader than before—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 public’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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