Trump has a disapproval among Republicans now that is 80%!!! Yes! 80%, you heard that right, because the country is in worse debt than it’s EVER been in, the price of gas has skyrocketed, groceries are still way to high, in fact prices on everything has gone up everywhere you turn, we have turned against our allies & Trump has started an unnecessary war with Iran that he now says he’s bored with because he KNOWS that he’s not getting from Iran what he wanted out of it & the strait of Hormuz was closed by Iran & regardless of what kind of negotiations he tried making with Iran—they didn’t work & it is still closed which BTW, was open before this war started. 👉👉 Key Points
•Trump is underwater in most states as he reaches his birthday, with a net approval negative across much of the battleground map
•Kentucky has seen the sharpest decline since the start of his second term, followed by Montana & Idaho
•Several states that began his term in positive territory, including Florida, Ohio and Texas, are now net negative
•Deep-red states still form Trump’s strongest base, but many of those margins have narrowed sharply since January 2025
•Younger voters, independents & women remain among the groups most negative on Trump in the latest national Civiqs tracker
Nationally, Trump’s approval stands at 36 percent, with 59 percent disapproving. That leaves him clearly underwater overall & the state map shows the same pattern: strongest in Republican strongholds, deeply negative in blue states & under pressure across much of the battleground map.
👉👉 What’s Driving the Numbers
The national demographic breakdown helps explain why the state map looks the way it does.
Trump’s weakest numbers come among younger voters. Among adults aged 18 to 34, just 21 percent approve while 72 percent disapprove. Among those aged 35 to 49, approval is 29 percent & disapproval is 64 percent.
👉👉 Independents are also strongly negative, with 28 percent approving & 64 percent disapproving. Women disapprove by a 65-to-30 margin, while men are more divided at 52-to-42.👉👉👉 Education is another clear fault line. Among postgraduates, Trump’s approval is 25 percent, & disapproval is 71 percent. Among non-college graduates, the gap is narrower at 39 approve to 55 disapprove.
Those splits help explain why Trump’s standing remains so much stronger in parts of the Republican heartland than in more highly educated, urban & competitive states.
👉👉👉 Deep Red States Still Back Trump—But by Less
Trump’s strongest ratings still come from heavily Republican states, but many of those early advantages have narrowed.
Wyoming remains his best state, with a net approval rating of 25. North Dakota follows at 15, then South Dakota at 14 and West Virginia at 13. Alabama & Idaho each stand at 11, while Oklahoma is at 10.
👉👉👉 That still leaves Trump above water across much of the red-state interior. But compared with the start of his second term, the erosion is striking. In January 2025, Wyoming opened at 47. Idaho began at 34. West Virginia was at 35. Those states are still positive now, but by much slimmer margins.
Kentucky offers an especially sharp example. Trump started his second term with a net approval rating of 23 there. It now stands at -4, wiping out its earlier advantage.
Swing States Have Moved Further Against Him
The most politically significant movement is in the states that tend to decide national elections
👉👉👉 Florida now sits at -13 net approval, down from 9 on January 20, 2025. Ohio has dropped from 8 to -14. Nevada has fallen from an even 0 to -20. North Carolina has gone from 0 to -15. Pennsylvania has moved from -3 to -17.
Arizona now stands at -13, Wisconsin at -16 & Michigan at -21. Georgia sits at -20.
Those are not landslide deficits, but they point in the same direction: Trump is underwater across much of the battleground map& in red leaning states.