Middle Class Turns on Trump Amid Affordability Crisis
America's middle class -- once a core pillar of Donald Trump's political coalition -- is showing signs of breaking away as frustration over living costs intensifies, according to new polling and economic data.
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lamplighter
Joined 2013/04/13Visited 2025/11/16
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... YouGov/Economist polling over the past three months shows a clear downward trend in Trump's standing with middle-class Americans. In September, the group split 44 percent approval to 54 percent disapproval (-10). By October, approval slipped to 42 percent and disapproval reached 53 percent (-11). The latest November numbers show a sharper deterioration: just 40 percent approve of Trump's performance, while 58 percent disapprove -- a steep net decline of 18 points The shift comes after a disruptive government shutdown and amid continued anxiety about food prices, housing costs, and winter energy bills. Why It Matters Middle-income Americans have historically been a contested but important group for the Republican Party. In the 2024 presidential election, Trump won 52 percent of the vote among those earning $50,000-$100,000 compared to Kamala Harris' 46 percent, flipping support from a group that had been more favorable to the Democrats in the 2020 election -- when Trump won 46 percent of their votes compared to Joe Biden's 54 percent. The latest polls suggest support from middle-income earners may be slipping away from the Republican Party. ...
The latest November numbers show a sharper deterioration: just 40 percent approve of Trump's performance, while 58 percent disapprove -- a steep net decline of 18 points
The shift comes after a disruptive government shutdown and amid continued anxiety about food prices, housing costs, and winter energy bills. Why It Matters
Middle-income Americans have historically been a contested but important group for the Republican Party. In the 2024 presidential election, Trump won 52 percent of the vote among those earning $50,000-$100,000 compared to Kamala Harris' 46 percent, flipping support from a group that had been more favorable to the Democrats in the 2020 election -- when Trump won 46 percent of their votes compared to Joe Biden's 54 percent.
The latest polls suggest support from middle-income earners may be slipping away from the Republican Party. ...
#1 | Posted by LampLighter at 2025-11-16 02:33 PM | Reply
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