US Trump Voters Are Over It - Midterm Warning Signs: A shocking number of the president’s supporters have turned against him.

Trump Voters Have Had Enough​

A shocking number of the president’s supporters have turned against him.
By Yvonne Wingett Sanchez and Elaine Godfrey

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Tomas Montoya has sold festival foods—funnel cakes, burgers, hot dogs—across the American Southwest for years. But lately, business has been rough. Costs are up, so he’s increased his prices. Employees are begging for hours he can’t give them. In Arizona, where he lives, Montoya pays $6 a gallon to fill up his food trucks with diesel. This summer, he may have to skip the California leg of his festival route because fuel is even more expensive there.

“It’s Trump,” Montoya told us outside a popular Hispanic grocery store in Casa Grande, Arizona, much of which sits in one of the most evenly divided House districts in the country. Montoya voted for President Trump in 2024, but now, well, frustrated doesn’t begin to cover how he’s feeling. The president is bragging about the economy, even though everyone Montoya knows is hurting; he promised to stop wars, but started one in Iran. “When Trump opens his mouth, three-quarters of what he says is stories, lies,” Montoya said. He’s planning to vote in the midterm elections this fall. But he may not choose a Republican.

You can’t flip a funnel cake in this part of Arizona without spattering someone who sounds just like Montoya—anxious, and a little regretful about how they voted two Novembers ago. These days, a shocking number of the president’s supporters have turned against him. Some of Trump’s fanboys in the libertarian-leaning manosphere have spent the past year baffled by his actions on the Epstein files, immigration, and now Iran. And in the past week, religious conservatives have been criticizing their once-unassailable leader after he posted a photo on social media of himself as Jesus and attacked the pope, calling the first American pontiff “WEAK on Crime.” Some Republican operatives in battleground states told us that they’d rather Trump not campaign too hard for their candidate; others have seen their small-dollar donations plummet.

Midterm elections are typically rough for an incumbent president’s party. But this year threatens to be brutal. Trump’s approval is lower right now than it was at this point ahead of the 2018 midterm elections, when Democrats won back the House in a historic blue wave. Almost every new poll is a red flag for Republicans: Independents, young voters, and Latinos—groups that were crucial to Trump’s win in 2024—aren’t in the bag anymore. Even non-college-educated white Americans, once the president’s strongest group, have turned on him, according to a CNN polling average. Democratic-leaning voters are 17 points more likely than GOP-aligned voters to say they’re “extremely motivated” to vote in November.
Many Trump voters, in other words, have had it. At this point, it seems safe to declare that the historic coalition that powered the president’s second reelection is finished—kaput. The question is whether, with seven months to go until the midterms, any semblance of it can be revived.

Casa Grande, a pit stop between Tucson and Phoenix where agricultural fields give way to new subdivisions, is on the northwestern edge of Arizona’s swingy Sixth Congressional District. In 2024, Trump won here by less than a point, after losing the district by less than a point four years earlier. The area is currently represented by Juan Ciscomani, a Republican who narrowly won his two terms in Congress and who outperformed Trump by a slim margin in 2024. Ciscomani is up for reelection again this year, but what we heard from some of his constituents may not give him much reason to be optimistic about his prospects.

Shoppers outside the market bemoaned the rising price of everything: gas, meat, store-made chicharrones ($9.29 for a big bag). And they were ready to punish Trump’s party for it. Traci Calvo, a 61-year-old Democrat living on a fixed income, said she’s poorer today than she was in 2024, when she voted for Trump, believing he would bring down prices. High gas prices mean that she is staying home more often—skipping Bible studies at her church, volunteering less, and even missing exercise classes. Trump’s decision to go to war with Iran was her breaking point with the president. “I think that he just wants war,” she said. “He’s made it plain that he’s adversarial with everybody.” She doesn’t plan on voting for Ciscomani, or any other Republican for that matter, in November.
The mood among voters was just as grim some 60 miles southeast in Oro Valley, a northern suburb of Tucson known for its scenic mountain views—and home to many conservative voters whom Ciscomani and statewide Republicans rely on. Sitting inside of her car after a shopping spree at a dollar store, Zuriel Reyes told us she feels “shitty” about having voted for Trump in 2024, her first-ever election. “I don’t really trust our government anymore,” the 19-year-old said, taking a bite from a Slim Jim. She’s signed up to go into the Army next year and feels like the president is “putting all our lives in jeopardy with this weird war game that he’s playing.”

The conflict with Iran has disappointed plenty of others who once supported the president, including some who are much more firmly planted in MAGA world. On Easter Sunday, Trump’s threat to wipe out “a whole civilization” in Iran drew ire from many onetime Trump devotees, such as Tucker Carlson, Alex Jones, and Megyn Kelly, who subsequently declared on her SiriusXM radio show that she was “sick of this shit.”

Earlier this week, when Trump posted the AI image of himself dressed in flowing robes, surrounded by a heavenly glow while healing a sick man, he alienated the one group of Americans that has rarely left his side: Christian conservatives. The picture, declared the Daily Wire reporter Megan Basham, was “OUTRAGEOUS blasphemy.” Joel Webbon, a far-right pastor who believes that women should be stripped of their right to vote, concluded that Trump is “currently demon possessed.” Riley Gaines, an anti-trans activist who has appeared at Trump rallies and whom the president has previously called a “tremendous athlete,” wrote that “God shall not be mocked.”

Trump deleted the post and said that the image was “me as a doctor.” But he also doubled down, as he tends to do, when asked to respond to his critics. “I didn’t listen to Riley Gaines,” he told one reporter. “I’m not a big fan of Riley, actually.”

Perhaps the storm cloud of negativity hanging over the president explains why his planned appearance in Arizona tomorrow will be so short. From touchdown to wheels up, Trump is scheduled to spend just two hours in Phoenix, we learned, a remarkably quick visit compared with his previous hours-long rallies featuring never-ending parades of MAGA loyalists. (He is also scheduled to appear at an event in Las Vegas today.) Some Republican operatives who expect to soon face highly competitive races want the president in and out of Arizona as quickly as possible. “When Trump comes out for a rally, he dominates the news the day before, the day of, and the day after,” one GOP consultant told us. “It’s a reminder for voters of why they’re angry.” (Though it’s better that Trump visits now, this person added, than in, say, October.) Despite this, all but one of Arizona’s Republican members of Congress, David Schweikert, will attend the event hosted by the conservative youth organization Turning Point USA.

White House spokesperson Kush Desai said Trump will highlight economic accomplishments in Nevada and Arizona. The president has been clear about “temporary disruptions” as a result of the war in Iran, Desai said in a written statement, “but tens of millions of Americans benefitting this tax season from the President’s signature provisions in the Working Families Tax Cuts—no tax on tips, overtime, or Social Security—reflect how the Administration hasn’t lost focus on delivering on our affordability agenda at home.” Ciscomani is scheduled to speak at the Phoenix rally. “Juan is focused on delivering results for Southern Arizona and getting things done. It’s why he was independently ranked the most effective member of Congress from Arizona,” his spokesperson, Daniel Scarpinato, told us in a statement.

Trump—or, more accurately, the conditions Trump has helped create—also seems to have affected GOP fundraising. Some donors are giving half the amount that they would normally contribute to Republican candidates and blaming economic instability for the decrease, one Georgia county GOP chair told us. Two Republican consultants from another battleground state told us that small-dollar donations to their candidates plummeted in early March, days after the U.S. and Israel launched strikes across Iran. In races that could be decided by very thin margins, these donations could mean the difference between sending out a final round of mailers to low-propensity voters or not. “If this is a two-week stretch, not a huge deal,” one of the consultants, who requested anonymity to discuss internal campaign dynamics, said. “If we’re still bombing Iran in November? I mean …”

The ifs are plentiful. Theoretically, if the war in Iran winds down quickly, if gas prices drop, and if food becomes more affordable, some Americans may feel reassured enough to rally behind Republicans once more. It’s not as though many of Trump’s critics are eager to vote for Democrats. “Trump could drop a nuke and I’d still vote Republican,” Kelly said recently. Gaines, after learning that the president doesn’t actually like her, wrote on X that “I love the President” and that she will “continue to support him and the America First agenda.”
But the president and his party may find salvaging the broader Trump coalition difficult. In Casa Grande, Montoya told us he’d give Trump three weeks to end the war and fix the economy. In the meantime, he’s eating leftovers more often, putting fewer miles on his food trucks, and setting the air-conditioning higher than he’d like as Arizona temperatures climb. Montoya will also, he added, be researching his options for November.

https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/2026/04/trump-pope-leo-iran-gas-prices/686819/ | https://archive.is/LRoAU
 
>Umpteenth article about how the wall are closing in
>Unreliable source
>TESniggers unquestionably believe it


Here you go:
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If Trump comes out after the war and claims economic victory because stock prices are high, its over for the midterms. I will doom like Fatpacks because its the only metric voters care about. The economy sucks and theres no action from the administration to change anything so far.

There are things Trump or even Vance could do or talk about more TODAY to improve their chances:
- End all visa programs, all of them, kill them
- Make it prohibitively expensive to continue to offshore jobs for 'elite human talent'
- Address the housing crisis, not even action is necessary, just some acknowledgement that its fucked
- Properly address AI concerns, again no action, but speak to worries people have about them
- Affordability is on the ballot, you can't wishcast it away

Anything else and he falls into the same trap that devastated Biden in '24.

If you cannot fix the economic vibes, its done, no SAVE act, no Democrat investigation, nothing. Enjoy 2 years of endless hearings and an uphill battle for Vance in '28.

I think there's a lot of truth in this.

One thing a lot of people don't know is that outsourcing, hiring overseas often starts and ends with investors. Most founders/ceos actually don't have real power within their own companies. Whatever the board says gets done.

I've seen many times the board forces their jeet to get hired specifically to implement overseas hiring. I have seen ceos that never wanted to hire indians be forced to.
It's the same with AI. Every companies is forcing AI usage while laying off workers. A lot of them have mandated AI usage quotas. Everything happens lockstep because the same VC firms control the board for most companies. Those same VCs are heavily invested in AI. Every single self destructive trend can be traced to topdown mandates by investors.
 
Lumber prices up 8% year on year. Record number of bankruptcies in 2025 by farmers only topped by Covid year; 2026 on track to beat that. My fucking trim for my aluminum windows is up 40%. Food though the roof and by September 2026 they will be up at least 5-10%. Coal shed jobs even. There isn’t a single sector showing anything but shit. Deficit at break neck speed. Even a rigged fed that would try and lower rates would just backfire and won’t help housing much. And he’s sucking consumers dry as the credit markets start to freeze up.

No DOGE checks. No tariff checks. Just inflation, job losses and boasting of the pittance of manufacturing new plants as the overall employment dwindles as there are more losses than gains.

If he is unpopular now; just wait until September. The Dems don’t even have to do anything; just shut the fuck up and let the clown show continue.
 
Where are all the carefully posed pictures of Tomas and his county fair employees who he cannot give extra hours to not because they work at fairs but because THAT DAMN ORANGE MAN!!!!!!!!
View attachment 8909363
Would you be surprised to find out that Yvonne pumps out anti-Trump and anti-GOP swill exclusively?
Would it shock you to learn she is anti-voter ID, anti-election integrity, anti-Kirk, anti-DOGE, etc?
View attachment 8909386
I do not want to put too much stress on you but Elaine is equally lefty.

Ah yes a member of Trump's core voting bloc!

Perhaps? Maybe he is kind of busy.
The amount of conjecture in this article is kind of crazy.

I do like USAToday's little receipt builder:
View attachment 8909409
It has never been more over!
View attachment 8909413
Anyway...yeah doomed.
Did anyone do the math on the food receipt? Take a look.
 
I think there's a lot of truth in this.

One thing a lot of people don't know is that outsourcing, hiring overseas often starts and ends with investors. Most founders/ceos actually don't have real power within their own companies. Whatever the board says gets done.

I've seen many times the board forces their jeet to get hired specifically to implement overseas hiring. I have seen ceos that never wanted to hire indians be forced to.
It's the same with AI. Every companies is forcing AI usage while laying off workers. A lot of them have mandated AI usage quotas. Everything happens lockstep because the same VC firms control the board for most companies. Those same VCs are heavily invested in AI. Every single self destructive trend can be traced to topdown mandates by investors.
It's all downstream from Dodge Bros v Ford
 
I’m very displeased with The Donald’s performance this season, but I think we can all recognize that putting the Democrats back in power will go as well for us as putting Labour in charge went in the Yookay.

It will mean the downfall of this country.
 
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I’m very displeased with The Donald’s performance this season, but I think we can all recognize that putting the Democrats back in power will go as well for us as putting Labour in charge went in the Yookay.
Putting democrats back in power is akin to putting yourself into a M.A.I.D. booth.
 
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I haven't encountered any new financial hardships since 2024. Things haven't gotten any better, but they haven't gotten worse in a way I easily noticed like during the Biden years. I'm definitely not sitting here cursing at a photo of Trump on my wall and counting the days until he's out of office. I approve of stepping up anti-immigration, though while I'm pleased at the drop in border-crossers I don't think they're doing nearly well enough at snagging and deporting illegals who are already here. I approve of blowing up terrorists, though it's gotten stale with the "ceasefire" and I am reserving judgment until I see how much longer this goes on. If it becomes apparent that there was no viable plan to kill sufficient numbers of Iranians to bring down that country and this is just wasting money, I am going to be perturbed.

Basically I'm still in "wait and see" as far as the MAGAs are concerned. There is little likelihood that whatever random faggot the Dems trot out is going to get my vote, because the Democrat motto is apparently, "No matter how retarded and banal our candidate is, you have to vote for them or you're a nazi" and they never seem to put any effort into running an actually intelligent candidate with nuanced takes on issues. But my vote is up for grabs in either direction, as it is in every election. I'm not going to vote on party lines if the other guy is a flatly better pick.
 
They've been trying to play the "People who voted for Trump are upset with him for the same reasons that we're upset with him" card ever since he won the popular vote in an attempt to claw back the narrative. It's slightly more true now than it was before with the Israel ass kissing reaching critical mass and all, but still not to their desired levels of literally everyone denouncing him as mega-Hitler, so I guess we'll have to endure these articles for another couple years.
 
The democrats just have to do nothing and win.

Expect to see them try everything to mess that up. Newscum or Kamala, instead of a wide appeal centrist candidate.

The world will witness its first pooburner US president if the democrats don't suddenly grow a brain. Bleak.
 
I’m very displeased with The Donald’s performance this season, but I think we can all recognize that putting the Democrats back in power will go as well for us as putting Labour in charge went in the Yookay.

It will mean the downfall of this country.
Trump shat the bed so hard that most right-wingers are voting Democrat going forward. Putting the Dems back in power is all but guaranteed.

I think there's a lot of truth in this.

One thing a lot of people don't know is that outsourcing, hiring overseas often starts and ends with investors. Most founders/ceos actually don't have real power within their own companies. Whatever the board says gets done.

I've seen many times the board forces their jeet to get hired specifically to implement overseas hiring. I have seen ceos that never wanted to hire indians be forced to.
It's the same with AI. Every companies is forcing AI usage while laying off workers. A lot of them have mandated AI usage quotas. Everything happens lockstep because the same VC firms control the board for most companies. Those same VCs are heavily invested in AI. Every single self destructive trend can be traced to topdown mandates by investors.
And Trump is doing fuck all about any of it. He literally thinks Americans are talentless retards and wants them to be replaced with jeet workers.
 
There's definitely a big nugget of truth to this. I voted for Trump the last two elections, and I am quite thoroughly over the worthless Zionist. He has been absolutely worthless, has either failed or done the opposite of every campaign promise he made, and he is rapidly shaping up to be as big a failure this time around as he was the last time around. Yeah, journofags lie, and some worthless wetback doesn't matter, but Trump has lost actual American support by actively fucking over Americans. His biggest failures by far have been refusing to do the mass deportations he swore we would get, and invading Iran and fucking up our shitty economic situation even further for Israel, though I could really write a whole essay about what a bitter disappointment that man has been. Unless he can fix both really damn fast before fall, then I do not feel remotely positive about midterms going well.

Address the housing crisis, not even action is necessary, just some acknowledgement that its fucked
Actually, Trump has addressed this multiple times. The problem is, he effectively said that prices suck, but he needs to keep them high so boomers don't lose their investments. Trump doesn't care about affordability because neither he, nor his friends, nor his closest sycophants, are effected by the economic issues worsened by Trump and Biden. Doubly so because Trump got rich off of real estate, and he clearly is not willing to spook his real estate buddies by actually discussing the housing crisis in any meaningful terms.
 
Idk, 4 months ago people were freaking out about ICE, saying how it would be the biggest issue of the midterms, and now everyone's forgotten it. Four months before that was the Charlie Kirk assassination which everyone said would be a defining moment, and everyone has since stopped caring. The midterms are six months away, so there's two more crazy things that will happen and the second one will actually decide the outcome, and as long as he wraps up the Iran war within a couple months, it won't be that.

I find a lot of the Trump regret stupid. He's done a lot of what he said he would - nuked the trans movement and closed the border. Hell, that's more than any president has done in my life time. Since when do presidents deliver on even 10% of their promises? A lot of you are living in a fantasy of someone getting elected and completing every single thing.

As far as the economy, I feel confused at the narriative. Everyone's telling me it's gotten so much worse, but gas was between $3.60-4.50 a gallon under Biden, under Trump its been between $2.25-3.60. The only massive grocery increases have been on beef, chocolate, and peppers. Healthcare has increased dramatically, but deportations and restriction of welfare are the obvious answers to lowering prices, and the left doesn't want to go there. Stocks have been doing great, and housing is the same as under Biden. Overall it feels equal.
 
I think it's pretty clear Trump won't be going to even try the 3rd term like he was rumored. The guy is just too old anyway. MAGA quickly stopped being a priority and he was looking for personal glory. Adding Greenland or part of Canada to the USA would be a big feather in his cap, sure but it never materialized. He's on track to be viewed as little more than a zogbot by history.

How many assassination attempts do you have to try on a guy before he takes the crown out of the gutter and rules like a despot? Apparently more than 3.
 
How many assassination attempts do you have to try on a guy before he takes the crown out of the gutter and rules like a despot? Apparently more than 3.
He can’t rule like a despot due to the nature of how our government works. This has benefits and hazards. The benefit is Trump can’t go full Cheeto Benito without the consent of the federal bureaucracy (which hates him and wants him dead), but the problem is that this nation is being strangled to death by said federal bureaucracy - they hate Americans and want them dead, too because these institutions have been subverted by Marxist ideology.

The system is irreparably rotten at this point, and the only feasible out is its total collapse.
 
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