Articles

America Gets Trump Fatigue

April 17, 2025
5764bc048ca78311e9d4185efc5c5ef0

We aren’t 100 days into Donald Trump’s second term and many Americans are already exhausted. They’ve had way too much thrown at them.

Voters made crystal clear what they sought during the 2024 election. They wanted prices to come down and the economy revved up. The Southern border had to be closed, our military strengthened and a strong leader installed in the Oval Office.

Some of that we’re getting, especially regarding the border. Other things—the rebuilding of the military—appear to be in the works. 

But on the key issue of the economy, Americans aren’t happy. Mr. Trump’s campaign promise to break inflation has been replaced by a fixation on raising tariffs, which nearly three-quarters of Americans expect to hike prices. We’re also confused: Is the goal getting trading partners to lower their tariffs on U.S. goods and services? Or replacing our income tax with high tariffs on foreign goods?

It isn’t only inflation and tariffs. Every week the White House throws its weight behind a new issue that went largely or entirely unmentioned during the campaign. Rename the Gulf of Mexico! Acquire Greenland! Take back the Panama Canal! Make Canada the 51st state! Americans find themselves asking, “Where did that come from?”

Message discipline has never been Mr. Trump’s strength. He doesn’t avoid drama; he relishes creating it. Not a real surprise from the man behind “The Apprentice.” Mr. Trump seems to feel he’s winning only if he dominates the coverage, sets the story line, advances the narrative and pulls a surprise or two. 

It won’t matter then to White House aides if some headlines are bad. They can always create another controversy in which Mr. Trump is the center of attention and, they believe, therefore comes out on top. 

His policies will almost certainly continue to be a mixture of deliberately planned, well-executed ideas and those concocted on the fly. The former include his undoing of the Biden administration’s excessive regulatory rules and red tape. The latter: the Department of Government Efficiency and removing fluoride from drinking water.

The Oval Office and the Mar-a-Lago dining room will remain arenas where advisers, cabinet officials and presidential pals fight over policies and process. It’s like ancient Rome’s Colosseum, without the bloodletting and lions.

It’s clear Mr. Trump believes in governing by executive order more than by legislation. The massive downside is that future presidents can undo his actions just as quickly by their own executive orders.

And there’s something shocking about this White House to an old-school politico like me: It doesn’t spend much time drawing attention to the president’s successes. Rather than patiently explaining his actions and why they’re good for Americans the president and his advisers move from one thing to another, seemingly at random. I still don’t understand why the president has yet to visit the Southwest border, the site of his greatest policy success to date.

There’s way too much retribution. Most of the president’s revenge attempts will end badly for him. Republicans could rue the day they set a new justification for retaliation from Democrats. 

One of the more unusual aspects of the Trump presidency is that it often helps parties in foreign countries that oppose him. Mr. Trump’s attacks on Canada revived the fortunes of Justin Trudeau’s Liberal Party in the upcoming national elections. He’s done the same thing in Australia, where the conservative party’s numbers have dipped because voters see it as too much in sync with Mr. Trump.

Read More at the WSJ

Related Article

9c031df2f72b7f564754f1d3ce8982ce
June 11, 2026 |
Article
The New York Times’s Sunday interview with Scott Pelley, formerly of CBS’s “60 Minutes” is a gobsmacker. ...
47eaa529e5162b52b40a1a13e11e2a48
June 04, 2026 |
Article
The primaries Tuesday in California, Iowa, Montana, New Jersey, South Dakota and New Mexico provide insight into how the midterms are shaping up. ...
A073348fc173127d8442f652aa330425
May 28, 2026 |
Article
Say what you will, President Trump’s endorsement is still mighty powerful in primaries. Last week, seven days before Tuesday’s Senate runoff in Texas, Mr. Trump endorsed the scandal-plagued state attorney general, Ken Paxton, over Sen. John Cornyn. ...
12cb2f9cf332d357d47c632da13a97d4
May 21, 2026 |
Article
Now that the Virginia Supreme Court has thrown out state Democrats’ attempted gerrymander, the battlefield for the House this fall is coming into focus. ...
Button karlsbooks
Button readinglist
Button nextapperance