The Mercury News

RESISTING TRUMP

Republican­s rack up losses across US in first big contest since presidenti­al election Some Trump voters express regret, while most stand behind him

- By Michael Finnegan

“What we saw last nightwas a response to the divisivene­ss coming from our president. People are looking for a different kind of leadership.” — Lisa Middleton, who won a City Council seat in Palm Springs, becoming the first openly transgende­r, nonjudicia­l elected official in the state

Anthony Miles figured that Donald Trump, rich as he was, could not be bought off. Now he regrets voting for him.

“He said he was going to drain the swamp,” said Miles, 62, a computer programmer who lives in Middletown, Conn. “All he’s done is restocked it.”

Miles was especially appalled by President Trump’s appointmen­t, since withdrawn, of a drug czar who took pharmaceut­ical donations as a congressma­n and wrote a law that thwarted federal power to punish companies that fuel opioid abuse.

A year after Trump stunned the world by defeating Hillary Clinton in one of the most conse-

quential elections of modern times, the president is breaking records for unpopulari­ty. Since World War II, no other president has scored Gallup approval ratings as low as Trump’s during his first year in office. He bottomed out last week at 33 percent.

That’s largely because of Americans who voted for Trump but disapprove of the way he has conducted himself in office.

Many of them, like Miles, are independen­ts. Some were never Trump fans, but cast ballots for him out of loathing for Clinton. They were essential to his electoral college victory, securing his narrow wins in Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvan­ia.

They will also be crucial to Republican­s’ fight to keep control of Congress next year— and to Trump’s prospects for re- election in 2020.

Since Trump took office in January, they’ve recoiled at his behavior — the cascade of Twitter insults; the messy relations with foreign leaders, both friend and foe; the racial provocatio­ns; and the lack of success in Congress, among other things.

“He has no clue how to

run a country,” said independen­t voter Pradeepta Chowdhury, 65, a doctor in Hilo, Hawaii.

Chowdhury was counting on Trump to repeal Obamacare because of the paperwork burden it imposed on his solo medical practice.

The public’s concerns about the president are part of a larger national anxiety: 63 percent of Americans report being stressed about the country’s future, according to the most recent Stress in America survey by the American Psychologi­cal Associatio­n.

The chaos of Trump’s leadership is also sharpening the nation’s cultural divisions. America is nearly as fractured as it was during the trauma of the Vietnam War.

One side, mostly white, sees Trump as tightening America’s borders, safeguardi­ng its heritage, standing up for U.S. workers, fighting to cut health care costs, disrupting a corrupt political establishm­ent and calling out lies of the mainstream media.

The other, more diverse, sees him as abusing power for personal gain, stoking prejudice, diminishin­g America’s standing in the world, imperiling the planet by ignoring climate change and threatenin­g to take health care away from millions so he can cut taxes for the rich.

With the nation already on edge, social media and cable news are driving the two factions farther apart.

“Our politics has become so tribal that people filter new informatio­n through a lens that tends to reinforce their pre- existing point of view rather than change their point of view,” said Republican pollster Whit Ayres.

Trump’s most devoted backers remain a strong political base. A Washington Post-ABC News poll released Sunday found 91 percent of those who voted for Trump approve of his job performanc­e, and 69 percent of them strongly approve.

Trump has managed to retain that core following even as he relentless­ly defies presidenti­al norms — belittling fellow Republican­s in Congress, undercutti­ng his secretary of State, falsely accusing Britain of wiretappin­g Trump Tower and demanding prosecutio­n of political opponents. Criminal charges against three Trump campaign aides portend more drama in the Russia scandal.

April Pfrogner, of Monongahel­a, Pennsylvan­ia, is unfazed. “I kept my Trump sign until it withered in the wind,” she said.

The daughter of a laidoff steelworke­r, Pfrogner, 42, grew up in a military family in a town where the coalmine shut down. Everyone in the family is a proud “Trumpster,” she said. What others see as boorish or belligeren­t, Pfrogner, a journalism student, sees as refreshing.

She whole hear tedly backs Trump’s agenda. “Shut the borders,” she said. “Please build the wall. Build it 50 feet tall.”

Pfrogner does not believe the women who have accused Trump of sexual assault. “All those women coming out, it just made me think, I’m voting for him anyway, you idiots — I’mnot a feminist,” she said.

For now, Trump’s detractors are not just more numerous than his supporters, but also more fervent — an alarming sign for Republican­s as the 2018 election approaches. The Post-ABC poll found 95 percent of Clinton voters disapprove of Trump’s job performanc­e, including 88 percent who strongly disapprove­d.

“It’s the strongest, most virulent, most potentiall­y damaging counter-reaction to an incumbent president that we’ve ever seen,” said Paul Maslin, a Democratic pollster.

If Trump is to recover, he must regain strength with independen­ts. In last year’s election, they tilted toward him over Clinton, exit polls found.

The voters quoted in this story are among the more than 400 Los Angeles Times readers who responded last month to an email asking for their assessment of Donald Trump’s presidency. They were part of a group of more than 4,000 readers who responded a year ago to a Times request to share their feelings about Trump’s election as president.

 ?? BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESS VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Many observers and victors believe Democrats’ wins Tuesday were a response to Republican President Donald Trump and his policies.
BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESS VIA GETTY IMAGES Many observers and victors believe Democrats’ wins Tuesday were a response to Republican President Donald Trump and his policies.
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 ?? SPENCER PLATT — GETTY IMAGES ?? Though President Donald Trump has the lowest approval rating in history after a year in office, most of his supporters are still in the president’s corner.
SPENCER PLATT — GETTY IMAGES Though President Donald Trump has the lowest approval rating in history after a year in office, most of his supporters are still in the president’s corner.

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