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Trump’s policies are costing him his approval ratings

Now he’s afraid he might get impeached.

Donald Trump’s election against Kamala Harris shocked many, with the former narrowly securing 49.8% of the popular vote compared to the latter’s 48.3%. He secured a clean sweep of all seven swing states, which ultimately secured him a second term.

What makes his return to the Oval Office striking is that he delivered exactly what he preached during his campaign. Prominently among these were his immigration policies, vowing to carry out the ‘largest deportation program’ in the nation’s history.

This included a massive expansion of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) manpower and an extension on his Muslim travel ban, which would include Gazan refugees. Such promises fuelled xenophobic rhetoric within an already divided America.

Beyond immigration, Trump pledged to dismantle his predecessors’ policies, particularly those tied to healthcare, environmental protections and diversity initiatives. Additionally, taxes rose for lower- and middle-income Americans while regulations benefiting corporations were rolled back. Regardless, many still chose to vote for a man who had been impeached twice and narrowly avoided being convicted of multiple crimes.

Usually, new presidents enjoy a ‘honeymoon period’ of approval ratings that sit above 55%. While he never experienced this in his first term, his second term did come close, ranging roughly 52%. While still below average, it did show that Americans had more trust in him compared to his last term. However, that goodwill did not last.

Almost immediately after inauguration came the tariffs he had long promised escalated into a full-blown trade war. By March 2025, import taxes ranged from 25% to 60% and were imposed on many countries, justified as a solution to trade deficits, but framed around issues such as fentanyl trafficking, illegal migration, and the monopolization of key sectors like energy and electronics.

For Americans, the impact was swift with prices of everyday goods such as groceries and fuel skyrocketing as tariffs continued to pile up. Instead of suppressing inflation as he had promised, Trump has instead caused a surge. Simultaneously, healthcare programs were burdened with stricter work requirements, increased copays and tighter eligibility checks which cost millions of Americans access to healthcare.

By April, just four months into his presidency, approval ratings began their steady decline as Americans started to feel the strain of Trump’s promises, but nothing hurt his ratings more than his tactics on immigration enforcement.

On January 23rd, ICE launched large-scale raids in several cities with operations that resembled military campaigns, to the extent that the National Guards got involved in aiding them. Under the guise of targeting undocumented immigrants, ICE was truly on the lookout for anyone who didn’t fit into Trump’s niche definition of the American identity.

With excessive force being common throughout ICE operations, even against non-threatening individuals, an appalling incident saw the shooting of an American citizen resulting in death just recently. Rather than taking accountability, the administration labeled her as a domestic terrorist and defended the perpetrator.

Naturally, many were outraged by these acts of unnecessary violence. Within several months of office, an estimated 605,000 people were deported, including US citizens who had no citizenship in the countries they were expelled to.

Aside from domestic affairs, Trump has taken on an agenda that reinforces an imperialist shadow. He withdrew from major international agreements like the Iran Nuclear Deal, and the Paris Climate Agreement while reducing NATO and foreign aid funding, each of which have their own waves of consequences.

Despite posturing himself as a peacemaker and vying for the Nobel Peace Prize, wars in Ukraine and Gaza continue unabated. He orchestrated the capture of Venezuela’s President, an act widely condemned as illegal and paraded himself as a saviour.

Such an event renewed his confidence in striking Iran amidst the ongoing protests, which many opposers call out as an unnecessary intervention. At the same time, after making similar threats to Canada, his proposal to annex Greenland was so extreme that even his own military Generals refused to comply.

Based on all that’s happened, Trump’s end-of-year approval ratings did not just merely decline but collapsed at a pace and depth that surpassed his first presidency.

By the end of last year, approval of his efforts had fallen to a range between 39% and 41% while disapproval reached as high as 57%. Interestingly, the Republicans themselves are also losing confidence in Trump, with fluctuating stats.

Seeing that his grip on US leadership was slipping away, Trump made a statement where he admitted the importance of the GOP winning the midterms, otherwise the nation would ‘find a reason’ to impeach him. What’s funny is that many have indeed awaited a reason to impeach him since he took office again, reflecting the deep distrust Americans have of him, and his actions this past year have only proved them right to do so.

With ratings declining steadily, congress is likely to push back on Trump’s plans with GOP lawmakers turning their backs. The significance of these events lies not only in the number but also in what they represent, which is a withdrawal of American hope rooted in community negligence and imperialist overreach.

Now, the future of America lies in the midterm elections. Let’s just hope that the Americans vote accordingly this time, as the fate of the nation’s leadership doesn’t just affect them, but the rest of the world too.

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