Opinion: Trump’s approval rating sinking like the Titanic
Donald Trump’s approval rate in the key Southern States is slowly beginning to trend downwards.
Key states which gave Donald Trump the edge over Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton included Michigan in particular. Exactly four months into Donald Trump’s presidency, Michigan state citizens are not exactly thrilled with Donald Trump. Only 37% of Michigan voters in the state favor Trump, with a full 53% in severe disapproval, according to a Newsweek report.
Even worse, only 35% of electors in a key Trump supported American country view Trump’s actions constitutional, while a full 61% do not.
The FBI Director sacking of James Comey and the Trump administrations controversial Russian ties, have not proven Trump any assistance to Trump’s national approval rating. His current national rating is a mere 39.1% and hanging precariously with the fate of our entire nation sitting atop an atom bomb with the temperament of a petulant child.
Our national security is becoming fragmented. Now matter how much our military budget increases, when national security and defense secrets remained compromised on Trump’s infamous Twitter account, there is no protection from America’s enemies, no security for our children, no hope of a greater America. Not to mention Trump’s favored tax cuts to benefit the 1% solely, while ensuring the poor stay poor, and the rich stay richer.
Cuts to the EPA, gutting the Affordable Care Act and Obamacare, forcing millions to abandon insurance, stranded with a replacement they cannot afford, and the party of money over Jesus and basic intrinsic compassion, humility, acceptance, and humanity, does not care one iota whatsoever.
As long as Trump sees a profit, he does not care who goes beneath the dirt or gets trampled apart along the way, or how many lies per day flow from his calculating mouth.Even in Texas, a state Trump won with ease, the president’s approval rating appears to be deeply shattered.
Only 42 percent of Texans approved of the job he was doing, compared with 54 percent who disapproved, a Texas Lyceum survey found in April.