Trump’s latest clash with the polls reveals far more than a dispute over numbers; it exposes a struggle over who gets to define reality in American politics. Surveys from AP-NORC and The New York Times/Siena capture a nation uneasy about the economy, immigration, and whether life is truly improving. Four in ten Americans voicing approval is enough to sustain a movement, but not enough to quiet the doubts.
Trump’s response is both familiar and telling: question the methodology, attack the coverage, and highlight more favorable data as the “real” story. In a polarized era, each side chooses its own polls to believe, its own narrative to defend. What remains is a fragile trust between leaders and the public, where every percentage point becomes a battlefield, and the fight over perception may matter almost as much as performance itself.