New Approval Ratings Reveal How Ameri

The story the White House tells is breathtaking.

The numbers are brutal. Trump calls his second term a historic triumph, a golden age of cheap gas, tough tariffs, and

“America First” glory. But beneath the rallies and rehearsed victories, the country isn’t buying it.

Trump’s second term has become a clash between spectacle and sentiment, between what is proclaimed from the podium and what people actually feel in their lives.

He touts tariffs as strategic genius and low gas prices as proof of his mastery, while insisting that America is safer, richer, more respected.

Yet public opinion has barely budged, with approval mired around four in ten, and disapproval stubbornly higher.

The promise of a “historic” presidency is colliding with a stubborn, measurable reality.

His aggressive expansion of executive power, fiery confrontations over Venezuela, and

even flirtations with annexing Greenland thrill loyalists but unsettle many others.

Immigration crackdowns and lingering scandals keep the country on edge, not united.

Trump still dominates every conversation, every headline, every fight.

But the enduring gap between his triumphant self-portrait and a skeptical public may be the defining legacy of his second term.