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Trump risks losing ground with voters on the economy

Trump risks losing ground with voters on the economy

Yahoo08-04-2025

The anxiety stemming from President Trump's tariffs is opening him up to new vulnerabilities on an issue that has long been seen as one of his strengths: his handling of the economy.
Polls released over the last several days have shown growing voter opposition to Trump's move to impose steep tariffs on the rest of the world.
Though the situation is fluid and voter sentiment could change, the numbers suggest the president has found himself in new, more volatile political territory that has the potential to damage him and the rest of his party heading into the midterms.
'Trump's entire theory of reelection was, 'I'm a businessman, I'm going to tackle the soaring costs and make it better for you,'' said Democratic strategist Joe Caiazzo. 'We're doing the opposite of that.'
The economy and inflation proved to be one of Democrats' weak spots in the 2024 presidential election. While the Biden administration and Vice President Harris's campaign touted how much inflation had dropped from its 2022 peak and acknowledged it still had progress to make, many voters viewed the state of the economy poorly. Trump overwhelmingly won those voters.
Polls repeatedly showed ahead of and after Election Day that the economy was the most important issue on voters' minds, and one exit poll from December found that the economy was the top deciding factor in favor of Trump for voters in the seven main battleground states that ultimately all voted for him.
Trump pledged to lower prices on 'Day 1,' but his approval rating overall and on the economy has ticked down as inflation has mostly remained roughly the same, above the Federal Reserve's 2 percent goal. Consumer sentiment dropped to its lowest level in two years in the University of Michigan's benchmark survey last month.
This was all before Trump unveiled his wide-ranging tariffs last week, which have rattled markets for days. The plan imposes a 10 percent baseline tariff on imports from all foreign countries and higher rates for about 60 countries deemed 'worst offenders' on trade barriers.
Democrats said Trump's popularity starting to drop after taking office was natural to some extent, as it happens for all presidents. But they say his economic decisions are to blame for accelerating it.
Caiazzo said the tariffs will be 'monumentally toxic' to the administration, giving Democrats an opening to tap into voters' frustration with prices expected to rise as a result.
'Basically, what the Trump administration, Trump Republicans are proposing to the American people, it's very simple,' he said. 'It's an economy in which things cost much more.'
Multiple polls have shown declining support for Trump's policies over the past week, leading up to and following Trump's April 2 announcement, which he called 'Liberation Day.'
A Wall Street Journal poll released Friday found 52 percent disapprove of Trump's handling of the economy, compared to 44 percent who approve. The disapproval is 12 points higher than the 40 percent who said in October that they had an unfavorable view of Trump's economic plans.
Pollsters found 54 percent said they oppose placing tariffs on imported goods, while the percentage who said tariffs will raise prices on consumer products rose from 68 percent in January to three quarters in March.
A poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research showed Trump maintaining his strength on immigration, with half of U.S. adults saying they approve of his handling of the issue. But 60 percent said they disapprove of his handling of trade negotiations with other countries, and nearly that amount said the same about his overall handling of the economy.
A CBS News/YouGov poll showed 64 percent of adults said Trump is spending not enough time focused on lowering prices and 55 percent said he's spending too much time on imposing tariffs.
The polling came shortly before the stock market experienced a whirlwind on Monday, jumping briefly following rumors that Trump was considering a 90-day pause on implementation of the tariffs. But after the White House dismissed those headlines as 'fake news,' the stocks moved back into the negative territory.
The market finished the day with mixed results, as some countries signaled openness to negotiations with Trump to end the tariffs.
'He has said, we're going to suffer, and we just got to tough through because at the end, it will pay off,' said Democratic strategist Crimson Macdonald. 'But if I know anything as a non-economist, just as an American, the stock market is our signal… and you don't sell off like this if you have hope for the future.'
Trump has framed his moves as standing up for Americans being taken advantage of by other countries. He has acknowledged that the country could feel 'some pain' from a trade war but maintained that it is in the long-term interest.
'President Donald J. Trump is finally doing what politicians have refused to do for decades — fighting back against the one-sided war waged on American workers,' the White House said in a release Monday. 'As he puts into action his bold plan to reverse the decades of globalization that has decimated our industrial base, President Trump is putting the Forgotten Men and Women of America first.'
It pointed to unions like United Auto Workers and the Steel Manufacturers Association in addition to everyday Americans who have declared their support for Trump's tariffs.
MacDonald said the shift in opinion presents an opening for Democrats, but she's not confident the party is in a position to regain those supporters. While polls have shown dropping support for Trump, they have also shown record low approval of the Democratic Party as a whole.
She said a liberal populist message like that of Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), who has been traveling the country to share his views pushing back against Trump, may resonate best with voters who are disenchanted with the current president.
'I think that the Bernie Sanders's message is going to resonate with those independents because now it's not just one side that's angry and riled up,' she said.
But Republicans urged caution with being too quick to judge how the tariffs will play politically, given that the midterms aren't until next year and the tariffs were just implemented.
Republican strategist Brian Seitchik said Trump has been consistent on his tariff policy.
'Certainly, the last few days have been very volatile and disruptive, and people who track their stock portfolio on a daily basis are trying to avoid a heart attack,' he said. 'But Trump has made clear that we have to take a long-term approach to do this. And if you look at other economies and other countries that have gone fundamental shifts, it takes time.'
He said he expects the public's judgement on the tariffs will be part of the 'equation' for how the country votes in the midterms, as 'virtually every American now knows more about tariffs than they did a week ago.' He said Trump must make clear why the tariffs are necessary, noting that markets 'by definition' don't like uncertainty and a 'jolt' to the system.
'It's certainly difficult to try to ascribe a specific timeline to when this is going to be successful,' Seitchik said. 'So that's a precarious place to go, but Trump just has to make clear to Americans that in at least in the medium and long run, this is going to make their lives better.'
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Judge Orders J&J Subsidiary to Pay $442 Million in Antitrust Lawsuit

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LA Protests: National Guard Troops Have Detained Protesters (Live Updates)
LA Protests: National Guard Troops Have Detained Protesters (Live Updates)

Forbes

time14 minutes ago

  • Forbes

LA Protests: National Guard Troops Have Detained Protesters (Live Updates)

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June 7The Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department said it had arrested two people Saturday evening for alleged assault on a police officer, stating multiple officers had been injured by a Molotov cocktail, the Los Angeles Times reported. 10:34 exhibited 'violent behavior' toward federal agents and local law enforcement, the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department said in a statement, while clarifying it is not involved in federal law enforcement response and is instead focused on crowd and traffic control. 10:22 a post on X, Newsom said the federal government is taking over the California National Guard and deploying soldiers in Los Angeles solely to create a 'spectacle.' 10:06 announced in a post on X the Department of Defense is 'mobilizing the National Guard IMMEDIATELY to support federal law enforcement in Los Angeles,' stating Marines are standing by for deployment in case of violence. 9:17 House press secretary Karoline Leavitt announced Trump would deploy 2,000 National Guard troops to Los Angeles to address 'lawlessness,' citing protests targeting immigration officers. Similar protests have spread to other cities across the U.S., including San Francisco, New York, Chicago, Denver, Las Vegas, Philadelphia, Seattle, Boston, Santa Ana, California, and parts of Texas, including Dallas, Houston, San Antonio and Austin. At least 80 protesters were arrested in New York, while 15 were arrested in Philadelphia, more than a dozen were arrested in Austin and one was detained in Dallas. At least two police officers were injured during protests in Philadelphia. Los Angeles Metro Police officers stand on the road in front of city hall Tuesday night. People take part in an anti-ICE protest in New York City on Tuesday. Protesters walk by the Cloud Gate sculpture in Chicago on Tuesday. Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass will hold a press conference at 2 p.m. EDT Wednesday. Protests broke out Friday and Saturday in Paramount and Compton, cities adjacent to Los Angeles, over immigration raids conducted by ICE, during which the agency detained 44 immigrants Friday and 118 immigrants Saturday, the Associated Press reported. Police and protesters clashed over the weekend, according to local reports and videos on social media, with law enforcement using tear gas and flash grenades to break up the crowds while some protesters threw rocks and lit vehicles on fire. Glendale, California, announced Sunday the city had terminated an agreement with Homeland Security and Immigration and Customs Enforcement that allowed the agencies to house federal detainees at the city's police facility. Glendale officials said the move was 'a local decision and was not made lightly,' as the city 'recognizes that public perception of the ICE contract—no matter how limited or carefully managed, no matter the good—has become divisive.' Glendale's city manager opted to end the contract after 'careful evaluation of legal, operational and community considerations,' the city said, noting the decision was not 'politically driven.' Trump reportedly said in a memo he is invoking Title 10 of the U.S. Code on Armed Services, which allows the federal government to deploy the National Guard if the United States is 'invaded or is in danger of invasion by a foreign nation,' or if there is a 'rebellion or danger of a rebellion against the authority of the Government of the United States.' Vice President JD Vance said in a post on X on Saturday night the influx of immigrants, which he called 'Biden's border crisis,' amounts to an 'invasion,' rebuffing critics who have questioned whether Trump had the authority to deploy troops. Trump's move has faced some pushback from constitutional scholars. 'For the federal government to take over the California National Guard, without the request of the governor, to put down protests is truly chilling,' Erwin Chemerinsky, dean of the University of California Berkeley School of Law, told the Los Angeles Times. The legal issues raised by Trump sending the National Guard to L.A. (Los Angeles Times)

Trump EPA moves to repeal climate rules that limit greenhouse gas emissions from US power plants
Trump EPA moves to repeal climate rules that limit greenhouse gas emissions from US power plants

The Hill

time14 minutes ago

  • The Hill

Trump EPA moves to repeal climate rules that limit greenhouse gas emissions from US power plants

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If approved and made final, the plans would reverse efforts by Democratic President Joe Biden's administration to address climate change and improve conditions in areas heavily burdened by industrial pollution, mostly in low-income and majority Black or Hispanic communities. The power plant rules are among about 30 environmental regulations that Zeldin targeted in March when he announced what he called the 'most consequential day of deregulation in American history.' Zeldin said Wednesday the new rules would help end what he called the Biden and Obama administration's 'war on so much of our U.S. domestic energy supply.' 'The American public spoke loudly and clearly last November,' he added in a speech at EPA headquarters. 'They wanted to make sure that … no matter what agency anybody might be confirmed to lead, we are finding opportunities to pursue common-sense, pragmatic solutions that will help reduce the cost of living … create jobs and usher in a golden era of American prosperity.' Environmental and public health groups called the rollbacks dangerous and vowed to challenge the rules in court. Dr. Lisa Patel, a pediatrician and executive director of the Medical Society Consortium on Climate & Health, called the proposals 'yet another in a series of attacks' by the Trump administration on the nation's 'health, our children, our climate and the basic idea of clean air and water.' She called it 'unconscionable to think that our country would move backwards on something as common sense as protecting children from mercury and our planet from worsening hurricanes, wildfires, floods and poor air quality driven by climate change.' 'Ignoring the immense harm to public health from power plant pollution is a clear violation of the law,' added Manish Bapna, president and CEO of the Natural Resources Defense Council. 'If EPA finalizes a slapdash effort to repeal those rules, we'll see them in court.' The EPA-targeted rules could prevent an estimated 30,000 deaths and save $275 billion each year they are in effect, according to an Associated Press examination that included the agency's own prior assessments and a wide range of other research. It's by no means guaranteed that the rules will be entirely eliminated — they can't be changed without going through a federal rulemaking process that can take years and requires public comment and scientific justification. Even a partial dismantling of the rules would mean more pollutants such as smog, mercury and lead — and especially more tiny airborne particles that can lodge in lungs and cause health problems, the AP analysis found. It would also mean higher emissions of the greenhouse gases driving Earth's warming to deadlier levels. Biden, a Democrat, had made fighting climate change a hallmark of his presidency. Coal-fired power plants would be forced to capture smokestack emissions or shut down under a strict EPA rule issued last year. Then-EPA head Michael Regan said the power plant rules would reduce pollution and improve public health while supporting a reliable, long-term supply of electricity. The power sector is the nation's second-largest contributor to climate change, after transportation. In its proposed regulation, the Trump EPA argues that carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases from fossil fuel-fired power plants 'do not contribute significantly to dangerous pollution' or climate change and therefore do not meet a threshold under the Clean Air Act for regulatory action. Greenhouse gas emissions from coal and gas-fired plants 'are a small and decreasing part of global emissions,' the EPA said, adding: 'this Administration's priority is to promote the public health or welfare through energy dominance and independence secured by using fossil fuels to generate power.' The Clean Air Act allows the EPA to limit emissions from power plants and other industrial sources if those emissions significantly contribute to air pollution that endangers public health. If fossil fuel plants no longer meet the EPA's threshold, the Trump administration may later argue that other pollutants from other industrial sectors don't either and therefore shouldn't be regulated, said Meghan Greenfield, a former EPA and Justice Department lawyer now in private practice. The EPA proposal 'has the potential to have much, much broader implications,' she said. Zeldin, a former New York congressman, said the Biden-era rules were designed to 'suffocate our economy in order to protect the environment,' with the intent to regulate the coal industry 'out of existence' and make it 'disappear.' National Mining Association president and CEO Rich Nolan applauded the new rules, saying they remove 'deliberately unattainable standards' for clean air while 'leveling the playing field for reliable power sources, instead of stacking the deck against them.' But Dr. Howard Frumkin, a former director of the National Center for Environmental Health and professor emeritus at the University of Washington School of Public Health, said Zeldin and Trump were trying to deny reality. 'The world is round, the sun rises in the east, coal-and gas-fired power plants contribute significantly to climate change, and climate change increases the risk of heat waves, catastrophic storms and many other health threats,' Frumkin said. 'These are indisputable facts. If you torpedo regulations on power plant greenhouse gas emissions, you torpedo the health and well-being of the American public and contribute to leaving a world of risk and suffering to our children and grandchildren.' A paper published earlier this year in the journal Science found the Biden-era rules could reduce U.S. power sector carbon emissions by 73% to 86% below 2005 levels by 2040, compared with a reduction of 60% to 83% without the rules. 'Carbon emissions in the power sector drop at a faster rate with the (Biden-era) rules in place than without them,' said Aaron Bergman, a fellow at Resources for the Future, a nonprofit research institution and a co-author of the Science paper. The Biden rule also would result in 'significant reductions in sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides, pollutants that harm human health,' he said.

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