5.7K opinions shared on Society & Politics topic. He will be considered the worst President in history.
Even Republicans are beginning to believe that.In June, The Siena College Research Institute will release its poll of presidential historians and scholars as to their ranking of Presidents. In the two previous polls in 2018 and 2022, Trump was in the bottom 5. In this year's poll, I am confident he will be in last place.
Why? Well, this opinion essay does a good job of explaining why Trump is the worst president in US history. Here are some highlights from that long opinion piece in the New York Times that I am gifting so everyone can read it. This is a long essay with lots of good details that I left out due to space limitations here, but it should be read.
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‘Easily the Worst President in U. S. History’
April 21, 2026
By Thomas B. EdsallThe damage President Trump has inflicted on the United States and the world is so enormous and wide-ranging that it is hard to grasp.
It runs the gamut from public and private institutions to core democratic customs and traditions, from the legal system to universities, from innocent targets of fraud to those duped into believing vaccines do more harm than good.
...
Projections suggest there will be millions of dead men, women and children as a result of his budget cuts, which were made without direct congressional approval.
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There are the fraud victims who will never get court-ordered restitution because Trump pardoned the guilty.
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It doesn’t stop there. America can thank the president for environmental deregulation that could sicken and kill people by the tens or even hundreds of thousands.
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At the same time, the administration has been canceling funding for lifesaving scientific and medical research.
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In addition to policies inducing sickness and death, Trump has undermined America’s ability to compete with China on clean energy. ...
- “China is on track for 1,400 GW, while the U. S. will reach only about 350 GW.”
- “China plans to add 212 gigawatts of solar and 51 GW of wind, compared to less than 100 GW combined” in the United States.
- “Offshore wind: China already has 42.7 gigawatts installed, compared with the U. S.’s Empire Wind project (816 megawatts in Phase 1, with a potential expansion to 2.1 gigawatts).”
Trump makes no secret of his disdain for renewable energy and the concept of climate change.
...
Trump’s threats to pull out of NATO and his tariffs, not to mention his endless carping against and routine faulting of European leaders, have alienated allies who have stood with us for more than seven decades.
Over the Trump years, European views of America have nose-dived.
On April 8, Politico published the results of a survey under the headline “More Europeans See U. S. as Threat Than China.” The survey found:
Only 12 percent of those polled in March in Poland, Spain, Belgium, France, Germany and Italy saw America as a close ally while 36 percent saw it as a threat. By contrast, China was seen as a threat by 29 percent of those polled across the six countries.
Trump has assaulted the integrity of the presidency, turning the White House into a corrupt enterprise, pardoning donors as his family’s companies receive millions through cryptocurrency purchases from foreign companies and crypto operators subject to U. S. regulation.
Trump’s agenda reaches far into the private sector.
Trump and his regulatory appointees cleared the way for his conservative allies...
...I asked Donald Kettl, a professor emeritus and former dean of the School of Public Policy at the University of Maryland... how consequential the Trump presidency will be.
On this measure he placed Trump in the Top 5 of American presidents, alongside George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, Franklin Roosevelt and Lyndon Johnson, noting, however, that “Trump’s consequences have been aggressive efforts to unravel the ideas of the other four presidents.”
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Michael Bailey, a political scientist at Georgetown, prefaced his assessment of Trump’s consequentiality by pointedly noting that he would rank Trump “as easily the worst president in U. S. history. The corruption and damage to long-term U. S. institutions and reputation are far beyond anything we’ve seen before,” including Andrew Johnson, James Buchanan and Rutherford Hayes.
As for being consequential, Bailey continued, Trump has been “highly consequential in an overwhelmingly negative way. He will leave a lasting negative legacy.”
Bailey listed three of these legacies: “The erosion of trust in the U. S. by European and Asian allies; the erosion of U. S. dominance of higher education; and huge budget deficits (not only due to Trump, but exacerbated by him).”
...
Gary Jacobson, a professor emeritus of political science at the University of California-San Diego, expanded the case against Trump:
He has done serious damage to many aspects of American government and politics that will be difficult and costly and, in some cases, impossible to undo.
The mass firing of dedicated and experienced civil servants has made government dumber and weaker and will make it harder to attract talented replacements even if the next administration wants to make it smarter and more effective.
The damage to scientific and medical research, the environment, relations with allies and trading partners, disaster preparedness, consumer safety, higher education, military leadership, civil rights, etc. will take years to repair even in cases where that is possible.
It is already clear, Jacobson continued, that “Trump is among the most consequential presidents in U. S. history, and not in a good way.”
In an email replying to my questions, Barbara Walter, a professor of international affairs at the School of Global Policy and Strategy at the University of California-San Diego, wrote:
To flag one thing that belongs on your permanent list that likely won’t show up in the obvious places: norms.
American democracy remained strong for so long because both its political parties and its presidents respected a set of unwritten rules.
Adding that while formal checks “were essential, the oil that would grease the wheels of democracy would be norms,” Walter continued. Trump “has shown that you can violate them and survive politically. He’s torn down the invisible wall that kept the worst impulses of political life in check, and once that’s torn down, a new, ugly world emerges.”
Yphtach Lelkes, a professor at Penn’s Annenberg School for Communication, shares Walter’s concerns, writing by email:
I’m less confident about which specific policies or institutions belong on which list than I am about the broader effect on norms. My guess is that this is where Trump’s longest shadow will fall.
Norms take a long time to develop because they rest on habits of restraint and on the expectation that violations will be punished. But they can disappear quickly once it becomes clear that punishment is not coming.
As a result, Lelkes wrote, “Trump’s most consequential legacy may be less any single policy than the lesson he taught politicians: Norms can be broken, repeatedly and openly, without necessarily paying much of a price.”
...
Even Republicans in Congress, who have been spineless under Trump, would rise in fury if a Democratic president followed Trump’s example.
That doesn’t, however, mean that all will be well. The problem created by norm violations is less that they will become permanently accepted and more that it will take time — years and years — to restore the trust in government that Trump squandered.
Donald Moynihan, a professor of public policy at the University of Michigan‘s Ford School, addressed just this point in an email:
Trump might be an empowered executive, but the effect is to weaken American government in any situation where people are asked to place trust in the long-term credibility of U. S. government commitments. This applies to private businesses, government employees and international allies.
As Trump has created an environment where private businesses, universities or civil society can be threatened by the president, such organizations can assume that traditional norms of equal-handed application of the law, due process and fair treatment that they once took for granted no longer hold.
For example, if the president says “My executive order allows me to fire civil servants for whatever reason I please,” how much does it matter if another president reverses it, because in the long-run potential civil servants know they no longer have job stability?
The Supreme Court has been complicit in the undermining of trust, Moynihan argued:
By allowing Trump to claim these powers, the Supreme Court is weakening the ability of a future president or Congress to repair the damage he is doing today. If the court goes all in on unitary executive theory, it weakens the ability of Congress to bind the president from doing bad things.
By eroding America's government credibility and soft power, Moynihan concluded, “Trump can be both a hugely consequential president and a deeply damaging one.”All of which points to one more indelible bequeathal: the stain on America left by the record.
Voters in this country twice elected a president with no ethics, no empathy and no end to his narcissism.
612 Reply- 2 mo
The ironic thing is that Trump and his administration do have some good ideas and, by shaking up things, has caused a re-evaluation or a fresh look on some ideas.
But his overwhelming corruption, narcissism, getting away will what is essentially illegal activity, and alienating the majority of people of Earth, has both moved America backwards and threatened its existence. When future historians write about the end of America, Donald Trump will be featured prominently. - 2 mo
Congress being Trump's lapdog and not doing its job as a check on the Executive Branch is also a problem. The GOP-led Congressional houses are complicit in this and share the blame.
And, finally, the conservative-dominant Supreme Court has facilitated this. Individually, I think most of the SCOTUS justices are more or less OK, but the Court has failed the American people in some critical ways especially when it comes to checks on the Executive Branch.
And, really, with a complicit Congress, what's to stop Trump from coming after them? He's already attacked them including some of his own picks... and that's part of the disaster: He got 3 picks so far. (He should have had one less.)
Trump and the GOP leaders for the past 46 years are the embodiment of this quote from Shakespeare's "Julius Caesar":
The evil that men do lives after them;
The good is oft interred with their bones; - 2 mo
Seriously, in public opinion and certainly the opinion of political scientists and legal scholars...
The Presidency is suffering a low-point.
Congress is suffering a low-point.
The Supreme Court is suffering a low-point.
You can't have that without a President who has helped ruin all three.
Thus, Trump will be considered the worst President in the US history.
When he dies, watch his funeral and see how many VIPs do NOT show up.
Asker2 moI agree he’s the worst president ever. It’s hard to reverse the damages he has done.
- 2 mo
" The ironic thing is that Trump and his administration do have some good ideas and, by shaking up things, has caused a re-evaluation or a fresh look on some ideas"
Like WHAT? Shaking up what? They make a grandstand play about DOGE that actually cost taxpayers billions? They cut benefits for real people who need them to survive, claiming it saves hundreds of millions and then grift BILLIONS from taxpayers?
Where's the irony and the good ideas? - 2 mo
@loveslongnails
Trump's people skills are atrocious, but Greenland would be good for development on strategic grounds.
Also, some of the issues going to SCOTUS. For instance, birthright citizenship being reassessed. I listen to SCOTUS oral arguments and there are some good points being raised by the administration. I am not saying I agree or disagree, but, by taking a different legal but novel interpretation of the law is forcing us to revisit laws created long ago to see if they are still adequate for today's reality
www.supremecourt.gov/oral_arguments/live.aspx - 2 mo
" Greenland would be good for development on strategic grounds" -- Seriously dude? So you're still into colonizing in 2026, by force if necessary? What would be good strategically is to leave a sovereign country's land alone and work out your differences with whom you feel threatened by. Why even considering annexing Greenland a good "policy" is beyond me, because it will never be done without force. It's not for sale.
I've heard the oral arguments against birthright citizenship and to my mind, it is clearly what the intention of the law is, as WELL as addressing Dred Scott. It's clear to ME that it's simply this administration's attempt to exert power and control over a populous by feeding fears into people over yet another non-issue. And it TRULY is a non-issue, against their claim, just as "illegal immigrants" is a TOTAL non-issue, especially with regard to the economy and expenditures.
Imagine a Trump like regime administering citizenship tests to a population having been feed with historical propaganda, outright bullshit and lies, and being used as a tool of fake patriotism to support a billionaire capitalist structure. That's what it would be, with a garbage test designed by Prager U. or some other nonsensical organization.
Additionally, the SCOTUS should not be deciding on the fate of a Constitutional amendment in any way. There's also a clearly defined process for this in the Constitution. The Heritage Foundation and the people behind it just want to legalize away the parts of the law they don't like, in order to facilitate more authoritarian control.
I agree there's room to revisit many laws, but how do you expect that to be done when one party with fascist like policies controls all levels of government? Now is the time to reject such rhetoric for the trash and theater that it is. - 2 mo
@loveslongnails No, you are misunderstanding and I said nothing of the sort about colonizing Greenland or taking.
Stop thinking like a liberal because that's only slightly better than thinking like a conservative.
Instead, think like an extraterrestrial in which you have no skin in the game and you assess information independently.
Facts:
1. Global warming is making the Arctic Ocean a considerably more viable transportation channel which it has never been in human history.
2. Russia has a large Arctic coastline and they are already actively engaged in expanding their Arctic presence including their navy.
3. China will want more cost-effective paths towards transporting goods... or military ships... into the Atlantic area (as would Russia).
4. Canada is not particularly strong militarily and are even having problems now with their Arctic military infrastructure.
5. GUIK - the imaginary line from Greenland to Iceland to the UK - has always been a strategically important area for detecting and tracking Russian subs. With a new path traveling over the Canadian Arctic Ocean area, GUIK will be less effective. A second well-defended "GUIK" would be needed between Greenland and Canada.
Bottomline: Greenland has increased strategic value due to global warming.
As for SCOTUS, there are all sorts of issues and I won't focus on one nor do I have a definitive opinion on them. - 2 mo
Sorry partner, but "thinking like a liberal", or "thinking liberally", is responsible for every great achievement the world has ever known. Yeah, it is.
I'm going to start and stop with this:
" Global warming is making the Arctic Ocean a considerably more viable transportation channel which it has never been in human history".
* IF global warming gets to the point where arctic routes become viable shipping lanes, you have a more serious problem than you can imagine. A one degree Celsius increase will cause increased coastal flooding, erosion and habitat damage, leading to worse situations. Hard stop on that one.
I'm far more concerned about the disappearance of 13 scientists connected to nuclear secrets and power, rocket propulsion and zero point energy. Not difficult to see what's going on there. - 2 mo
@loveslongnails as a liberal myself, I understand and agree.
But, as a STEM professional, I don't let my ideology cloud my objective judgment because Nature doesn't give a shit about what anyone thinks. I have to remind myself that every day because, in my line of work, if we deny that, people will die. - 2 mo
People DO die everyday because of science deniers and profiteering. Thanks for the comments and I'm out of this thread. See you next time.
Most Helpful Opinions
- 2.9K opinions shared on Society & Politics topic.
2 moDonald tRump is a mentally ill moron and criminal with zero qualifications to be president. I wouldn't hire the demented jackass to clean toilets. And his fake presidency is the logical outcome of placing a person like that in the White House, chaos, incompetence, and criminality along with a revolving door of incompetent criminal stooges in his cabinet and a trashed domestic and global economy. The fact that this aged Orange Ape was voted into that role for second time has destroyed all credibility the USA had. We are a global pariah at this point.
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1.2K opinions shared on Society & Politics topic. I honestly have no clue how and why so many people support him even when I think about it in a utilized perspective.
I am choosing to ignore the fact that apparently lots of people have a hard idea having empathy and enjoy supporting someone who is causing so much harm, but even from a practical perspective, I don't understand the idea of supporting someone who is attacking even your own interests.
It seems batshit insane to me.
Long story short, I am under the impression that there a lot of people who just enjoy licking the boot even when it is against their own benefit/interests.00 Reply
- 342 opinions shared on Society & Politics topic.
2 moLast 11 years have been ridiculously annoying. And he's played the leading role in all of it. "But Siren, he's only been president for 5.3 of those 10 years!" Yes, and he somehow managed to largely affect what was happening during Biden's term with what was left over of his cult following. Don't get me wrong, I'm in NO way saying Biden was great, just that Trump is worse
10 Reply
What Girls & Guys Said
Opinion
37Opinion
2 moBest president ever... in my lifetime. Defeated the odds... won the race... most promises kept from the campaign trail. Not trying to glaze the guy... but really, who else has done that much? Biden? Obomba? Bush? I'd argue nobody really. Just this one guy that liberals really hate because they get told he's a nazi pedo 24/7 and they believe it.
Fist step towards economic order since Clinton... I have an accounting degree so I see it, the TDS people just hate Trump and are not that smart about it.
224 Reply- 2 mo
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@msc545 How do you not know the difference between an associate degree and a bachelor's degree? You in the trades? that I would respect. But if you're just some schmuck that's worked fast food and you're trying to give me shit about it... I mean if you're some MD with an 8 year degree, you got me topped.
If you want to have a dick measuring contest on study... I have an AS in Physical Training, and an AS in Computer Science as well. I mean you're throwing shade at me for mentioning what gives my perspective on the difference between a Clinton/Trump economy and the rest... but are you throwing that shade from the back of a convenience store or some sort of welfare recipient? What the fuck high horse are you sitting on to judge me? - 2 mo
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Ahhhhh... the universal language. Stupid bitches.
- 2 mo
@msc545 I messaged you about an interesting find I found on what you shared. I think it's just another brick in the wall I have on women's integerty. I'm debating on taking screen shots of her and asking her about it the next time I see her, or just ignoring the fact that I know a hoe. I'm leaning towards ignoring her shit... she fucks around in the wrong crowed anyways.
- 2 mo
Wow! I just saw that. It's 4:30 in the morning here and I just got woken up by my service with an emergency that I have to deal with and then I saw that. So my morning is getting real interesting real fast. That picture you posted for me. It's real scary brother. You could not pay me enough to put my hands on that. Not to mention my dick.
- 1.8K opinions shared on Society & Politics topic.
2 moHe's proof that this isn't the America the founding fathers hoped for. As happy as I am he won. As much as I enjoy watching him. This country was fucked long before him. I don't think there's much he can do. And the truth is, many of the things people want him to control are probably out of his control.
The people deciding your quality of life and the laws you follow and what freedom means are large corporations. Your elected officials are just the people we elect to get paid to do what they ask.
So at least trump fucks some of these creeps over here and there. But it doesn't completely change the realities of how the world works.
10 Reply
Anonymous(25-29)2 moTrump is awesome. Biden is a mentally ill moron and criminal with zero qualifications to be president. I wouldn't hire the demented jackass to clean toilets. And his fake presidency is the logical outcome of placing a person like that in the White House, chaos, incompetence, and criminality along with a revolving door of incompetent criminal stooges in his cabinet and a trashed domestic and global economy. The fact that this aged Orange Ape was voted into that role for second time has destroyed all credibility the USA had. We are a global pariah at this point.
10 Reply- 7.4K opinions shared on Society & Politics topic.
2 moWas doing well and a lot of right things until Greenland and Iran.
Now he's in a pickle... and so is the world.
I think he could have done the relations better, but I like how he's done things with being very public and open. I prefer that to the hiding behind the curtain of last admin, even if it was less painful to watch. It should be public!
00 Reply
Anonymous(45 Plus)2 moWorst in U. S. history. By far. He's using the presidency to enrich himself. And he's the greatest threat to world peace right now. A sociopath. Human wreckage. A thief and a scumbag like he's always been. He's also a pedophile.
20 Reply10.6K opinions shared on Society & Politics topic. Good job on cleaning things up. And on illegal criminal immigrants. We just have to work on the gas prices and food prices now after Iran And then we have to set Cuba free and that’s what my Cuban friends are hoping for.
30 Reply
Anonymous(36-45)2 moBest lunatic puppet ever, worst President ever, one of the most despicable people on the planet. The USA is about to become a dystopian slave society instead of the one where American Dream propaganda gave you something of a middle class and false hope. Are y'all great yet?
00 ReplyHell and so fcking bad and I suffer because of his presidency, even though you are not American.
20 Reply- 472 opinions shared on Society & Politics topic.
2 moThe worst piece of shit doing the most terrible job at the worst possible time... and as a bonus, he's a pedophile and a criminal. Way to go, garbage red states people!
00 Reply 913 opinions shared on Society & Politics topic. A man of action.
A rare quality in a president.
Not necessarily good or bad.
But always better than someone who talks a big game and does nothing.00 Reply- 1.9K opinions shared on Society & Politics topic.
2 moI loved TPP so I was unhappy to see it reject during his first term. Starting wars doesn't make me happy, but hopefully takes down one of the bigger adversary for the USA. Glad he has focused on border and immigration enforcement. Other countries enforce immigration, so why not.
It is a mixed bag, although if you honestly look at all Presidents it is a mixed bag.
Well maybe not President Biden, I think everything was just bad.
00 Reply - 898 opinions shared on Society & Politics topic.
m 2 moMy honest opinion is that he's the most influential president I ever heard of, from a country I don't even live in. It's a masterclass in advertisement.
Apple, take notes.
00 Reply 2.7K opinions shared on Society & Politics topic. Not-an-American I want to make clear. From my view in the indo-pacific he is pretty damn good. He is keeping China on their toes and degrading them. Good work.
00 Reply1K opinions shared on Society & Politics topic. I used think he was alright but I have realized that he has not the slightest clue as to what the hell is going on ( he famously does not read - ever) and I think his presidency will go down as one of the most corrupt in American history.
00 Reply- 827 opinions shared on Society & Politics topic.
2 moHe is trying his best, but the AMERICA LAST DEMOCRATIC COMMUNIST PARTY OF AMERICA keeps blocking his efforts with lies and obsfucaions and Local Federal judges are trying to rule the country from the bench where they have no jurisdiction.
11 Reply- 2 mo
Precisely! 🏅👍
11.6K opinions shared on Society & Politics topic. I'm not sure what all of us did so wrong to deserve something like this, but we sure are being punished.
20 Reply- 4.7K opinions shared on Society & Politics topic.
u 2 mo"Donald Trump is a genius."
- The average Maga rube
20 Reply - 4.6K opinions shared on Society & Politics topic.
2 moMay very well be the dumbest president we’ve ever had and his supporters are even dumber
30 Reply
2 moBiggest psyop ever. All that talk to just bend over for Israel and the most evil people on this planet. What a weak cuck he is. Can't even save America with his own party back stabbing him while his enemies fail to kill him 3 times.
20 Reply26.9K opinions shared on Society & Politics topic. President Trump is the best President in my lifetime. Maybe in the last 100 years.
20 Reply11.8K opinions shared on Society & Politics topic. He's retarded and his pseudo leadership is a dumpster fire for personal rights.
10 Reply- 478 opinions shared on Society & Politics topic.
2 moWhat difference does it make? The 'middle' in politics that cares about reality and honest opinions is microscopic in the USA.
00 Reply - 5.1K opinions shared on Society & Politics topic.
2 moHe’s trying to fix the country and getting a lot pushback by people that liked the way it was because they could take advantage of things but now things have changed
010 Reply- 2 mo
He has complete control of the government... what pushback has prevented him from doing anything to better our situation? He broke just about every promise he made on the campaign trail. Your statement is vague and lacks any specific that support any evidence to your claim. What is he trying to fix? He says he wants no more wars, and starts them, he says he will end Russia Ukraine war on day 1 and he gave up on it, he said he'd release the Epistein files and he hasn't released it all and you can't read any of it while what he has releases is still redacted, he raised gas prices, food prices, has ICE occupying blue cities that have killed citizens, deported actual US citizens, works for Israel first not America first, and somehow it's other people's fault, in a government that can't stop him, when he fails completely.
- 2 mo
@Friendlybro79 yeah he definitely has failed on quite a few things he promised but what president hasn’t
- 2 mo
He's failed on almost everything and I appreciate you acknowledging he has failed. The failures are even more epic because he caused most of them himself. I am unsure if what pushback you're referring to that prevents him from getting policies put into play when the GOP has complete control of government by having the majorities in the house and Senate. People like me giving pushback, or any other citizen, doesn't stop him from doing anything.
So I'm genuinely asking you, not out of sarcasm, or wanting to be right, but wanting to understand your comment. What pushback is stopping him? - 2 mo
@Friendlybro79 I meant mostly the left stopping him from doing things or people in congress mostly
- 2 mo
I think he needs to do something about the gas prices because they are getting really out of control now But I guess some things can’t happen right away
- 2 mo
Thanks for the exchange. I really mean this when I say I try to learn more when people say things just so I don't assume your answers. That I feel is being rude. I try hard not to do that lol.
I want to uncover if you're on to something that I am just not seeing.
Ok so when you say the left:
Who on the left?
And
Do you have an example of where they (who and how) actually stopped Trump since he's been reelected from doing any of the things he promised on his campaign trail?
I am challenging you a little bit on your claim because many people feel so similarly and never have an actual example so please be specific. Take a policy he campaigned on in 2024 that he can't achieve because the left stopped him.
Who on the left, and how did the left stop him?
Thanks for keeping the conversation open and civil. I appreciate and look forward to hearing your examples. - 2 mo
@Friendlybro79 when the democrats tried getting him impeached last time, taking time away from him doing his job, left meaning liberals and democrats is what I mean but looks people are trying to assassinate him now instead of impeaching him
- 2 mo
Ok thanks for your answer. He hasn't been impeached since 2021.
I am clearly asking about his performance since he got reelected and to give an example that is current. Also both impeachments took under 3 weeks in total time away from his first four years in office (golfing took him away from job responsibilities more than the impeachments)
His assassination attempts were a terrible display of humanity and I'm glad he's ok despite not liking his performance in office. That said, the government he has is fully wrapped around his finger. There's no governmental slow down that the left can do besides just speak about how they don't like his job performance. That's doesn't stop him from doing what he promised.
Impeachments have nothing to do with his current performance in his second term.
Would you agree that you're not seeming to provide any examples of how the left is currently preventing Trump from doing what he promised?
He has no one to blame but himself. If you can provide a current example that is a legitimate reason that the Democrats actually stopped him from doing what he promised on the campaign trail in 2024 during this term so far please share. - 2 mo
@Friendlybro79 well I didn’t say they actually stopped him, but they’ve been trying with accusations of him, hiding information about Epstein files and lying about the Iran war when they definitely have been trying to get nuclear weapons for years
- 2 mo
That is true you didn't say they did stop him. I didn't mean to imply that if it came off that way.
This fact though means that everything he promised and has failed on this far, breaking every promise he made from his 2024 campaign, had no effect in him honoring his promise of lowering prices, ending the war in Ukraine and not going to new wars like he is with Iran. My point is the left and right will always be fighting each other but Trump couldn't have an easier time having the majority. He is blowing it completely and doing the opposite of what he promised. The left had nothing to do with it. He gets way too many excuses. I appreciate the conversation with you. Thank you.
- 9.7K opinions shared on Society & Politics topic.
2 moOk I guess. I don't concern myself with policies that much but more on what's being promoted between good and bad.
10 Reply - 8.6K opinions shared on Society & Politics topic.
2 moSo far, he's the best Pres. we've ever had!! EIGHT MORE YEARS!!
02 Reply- 2 mo
Retardation at its finest
- 2 mo
@SmokinAces2000 You certainly are!
- 5.1K opinions shared on Society & Politics topic.
2 moHis first term was MUCH better! His second term SUCKS!
00 Reply He’s a misogynist and his presidency is shit
10 ReplySold out real American nationalism to Zionist and neoconservative interests
20 Reply
2 moHe's the biggest 2 year old and he's destroying the white house and everything around him NATO doesn't even want us he's the biggest dumb ass to exist
01 Reply- 2 mo
Funny how NATO finally started paying 2% due to trump pressure!
He needs to be put in a psychiatric facility
00 Reply
Anonymous(25-29)2 moWorst ever. First term was second worst ever.
30 Reply
2 moHe's doing a great job so far.
10 Reply- 4.6K opinions shared on Society & Politics topic.
2 moA great leader who knows economics
10 Reply 2.3K opinions shared on Society & Politics topic. He’s fucking up
20 Reply
2 moI hope he dies soon
40 Reply
Anonymous(25-29)2 moHe’s too old and so was Biden.
20 Reply4.1K opinions shared on Society & Politics topic. Doing everything I voted him to do
20 Reply12.1K opinions shared on Society & Politics topic. The best in 100+ years.
00 Reply- 1.2K opinions shared on Society & Politics topic.
2 moHe’s a liar and a dumbass
00 Reply - 5.9K opinions shared on Society & Politics topic.
2 moTUCK FRUMP !!!
00 Reply 4K opinions shared on Society & Politics topic. Top 50 in U. S. presidents.
00 Reply- 6.6K opinions shared on Society & Politics topic.
2 moTotal failure
20 Reply - 970 opinions shared on Society & Politics topic.
2 moHe is hilarious
03 Reply- 2 mo
- 2.3K opinions shared on Society & Politics topic.
2 moa clown show.
00 Reply
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