
It was 11 weeks of his second administration and the president Donald Trump It’s not slowing down.
The president has signed 111 executive orders since taking office on January 20th, far surpassing one of his predecessors. White House.
“More than anything in American history,” Trump touted a week ago.
Trump is expanding The power of the presidencyhe disrupts longstanding government policies and significantly cuts the federal workforce through an avalanche of executive orders and actions.
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President Donald Trump presents an executive order signed on Thursday, March 20, 2025 in the Eastern Room of the White House in Washington, D.C. (Photographer: Kent Nishimura/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
Some of the latest nationals while Trump regularly presents his performances Opinion survey It suggests that Americans may not be so happy with the work he is doing as president.
The president was 43% approved and 53% disapproved in the Reuters/IPSOS survey conducted from March 31 to April 2, and was also underwater (46%-51%) in the Wall Street Journal poll on the field from March 27 to April 1.
A Daily Mail survey conducted last week also suggests that Trump’s approval ratings are in positive territory, but the majority of national opinion surveys on the ground are suggested as Trump is in negative territory from mid-March to mid-March.
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Trump has seen his numbers have fallen slightly since the start of his second term. His poll averaged a low presidential recognition rating in the 50s and a disapproval in the mid-40s.
Contributing to the slide has led to growing concerns about the economy and inflation. Joe Bidens Recognized ratings for most of his presidency.
Additionally, the latest investigation has been carried out almost entirely in Trump’s blockbuster tariff announcement last week, sparking a trade war with the country’s top trading partners, causing massive sales in financial markets, and raising concerns about the recession.
When asked about the market’s charge, the president told reporters on Sunday evening, “I sometimes have to take medication to fix something.”

President Donald Trump keeps the charts when making mutual tariff remarks at an event at the Rose Garden, entitled “Make America Wealthy” at the White House in Washington, DC on April 2, 2025. (Brendan Smialowski/AFP via Getty Images)
University of Texas politics professor and chairman Daron Shaw is a member of the Fox News decision-making team and a Republican partner in the Fox News polls, calling the economy a “£800 gorilla.”
According to a Reuters/Ipsos poll, only 37% of Americans approve of the job the president is doing in the economy, with 52% giving him a thumbs up.
Trump’s economy numbers are slightly better in the Wall Street Journal polls – 44% approval and 52% disapproval – but still underwater.
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Over the past week, Shaw suggested that the president is “slowly losing the argument that tariffs are part of a major program that lowers prices.”
“He cut out his work for him… He’s losing the story,” Shaw said of Trump. “He must argue that tariffs are part of a larger economic plan that addresses the issues people feel.”
The only problem Trump has in positive territory in Reuters/Ipsos and the Wall Street Journal polls was immigration and border security, another major issue that helped him return to the White House, along with inflation.

President Donald Trump speaks to reporters on Monday, March 31, 2025, before signing the executive order at the White House oval office in Washington, D.C. (Pool via AP)
But the show pointed out that Trump’s success has dulled the importance of the issue.
“The broader story is that he successfully secured border security and essentially expressed it as a matter of fact,” he argued. “One of the problems of success is that it’s something you’re not actually talking about anymore. It’s no longer at the top of the people’s issues’ priorities. Therefore, one of his dominant issues was neutralised by his success in his problems.”
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Trump’s polls have fallen in most surveys, but he still outperforms his ratings during his first term in office. Trump’s poll numbers have been in almost entirely negative territory for most of his first term.
“Look at these numbers. The numbers he’s averaging right now is still higher than any point in his first presidency,” veteran Republican poller Neil Newhouse told Fox News.
Newhouse emphasized that Trump’s Republican “base is behind him,” but this was not the case at the start of his first term at the White House.