His second government and president are 11 weeks Donald Trump No slowing down.
Since taking office on January 20, the president has signed 111 executive orders, far exceeding any of his predecessors White House.
Trump touted a week ago: “More than any in American history.”
Trump has been expanding Presidential Poweras he has subverted long-term government policies and greatly reduced the federal labor force through an avalanche of orders and actions.
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President Donald Trump signed a signed executive order on Thursday, March 20, 2025 in the East Room in the East of the White House in Washington, D.C. (Photographer: Kent Nishimura/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
When Trump regularly shows his performance drives the country, but some of the latest countries Poll It is suggested that Americans are not that happy with the work he did as president.
In a Reuters/IPSOS survey conducted between March 31 and April 2, the president received 43% approvals and 53% opposition in 43% approvals, and he was also underwater in the Wall Street Journal poll from March 27 to April 1 – 46%-51%.
Although a Daily Mail survey has also been conducted over the past week that Trump’s approval rate is on positive territory, most national public opinion surveys in the field have shown that Trump is in negative territory since mid-March.
Trump stands in the latest Fox News national poll
Trump has seen his number drop slightly since the start of his second term, when his polls averaged the president’s approval rate in the 1950s and disapproval in the mid-1940s.
Contributing to the slides is an increasing focus on the economy and inflation, an urgent issue that keeps the former president Joe Biden In most of his presidency, the approval rating is much lower than the water.
Additionally, the latest investigation is almost entirely ahead of Trump’s blockbuster tariff announcement last week, which sparked a trade war with the top U.S. trading partners, sparked a massive sell-off in financial markets and increased concerns about a recession.
When asked about the market plunge, the president told reporters on Sunday night: “Sometimes you have to take medication to solve the problem.”

President Donald Trump posted a chart of reciprocity tariffs at an event held in the Rose Garden in Washington, D.C. on April 2, 2025. (Brendan Smialowski/AFP via Getty Images)
Daron Shaw, a political professor and chairman at the University of Texas, is a member of the Fox News decision-making group and a Republican partner in the Fox News Poll, calling the economy “the 800-pound gorilla.”
According to Reuters/IPSOS poll, only 37% of Americans agree with the work the president does economically, with 52% giving him a thumbs up.
Trump’s figures on the economy in the Wall Street Journal Poll are slightly better – 44% approval and 52% disapproval – but are still underwater.
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Xiao suggested that the president “slowly lost the argument that tariffs are part of a larger plan that would lower prices” over the past week.
“He cuts his job for him …. He loses his narrative,” Shaw said of Trump. “He has to prove that tariffs are part of a larger economic plan that will deal with issues people feel.”
The only problem Trump is in the positive territory in Reuters/IPSOS and Wall Street journal polls is immigration and border security, which, along with inflation, is another of the most important issues that promptly poured him into the White House.

President Donald Trump signed an executive order at the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, D.C. on Monday, March 31, 2025. (via AP pool)
However, Shaw noted that Trump’s success undermined the importance of the issue.
“The broader narrative is that he has succeeded in border security and fundamentally raised that,” he said. “One of the problems with success is that it is something you no longer really talk about. It is no longer the focus of people’s problems. So his success on this issue offsets his main problem.”
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Trump’s poll numbers are falling in most surveys, but they still outperform viewership in the first semester of their tenure. In most surveys, Trump’s poll numbers are almost entirely throughout his tenure.
“Keep the perspective of these numbers. His current average figure is still higher than any time he had during his first presidency,” Neil Newhouse, a senior Republican poller, told Fox News.
Newhouse stressed that Trump’s Republican Party “has been behind him” and that was not the case at the beginning of his first term in the White House.