The latest polling doesn’t just signal a political wobble; it exposes a widening chasm between Donald Trump and a country that feels increasingly abandoned. An approval rating sinking to 37% is not a mere partisan snapshot—it’s a verdict from households where paychecks vanish into rent, groceries, and gas before the month is half over. It’s the voice of people who sense their sacrifices no longer translate into stability, let alone progress.
When 68% say the nation is on the wrong track, that discontent becomes a slow, grinding pressure against the foundations of trust. Voters are no longer treating the midterms as routine civic duty, but as a rare instrument of leverage. At the ballot box, they hope to reclaim a measure of control—rejecting policies they see as indifferent and a presidency they feel stopped hearing them long before the numbers proved it.