the end of American Internationalism

The State of the Union in Jeopardy: Donald Trump Faces Congress With the Worst Approval Ratings of His Career

The Address Nobody Agreed to Hear

Every State of the Union address carries political risk. But the State of the Union is in jeopardy this year in a way that is genuinely without modern precedent. On Tuesday, February 24, 2026, Donald Trump will walk into a joint session of Congress carrying the worst pre-SOTU approval ratings of his entire career — worse than in 2018, worse than in 2020, and worse than any second-term president has faced at this point in their presidency in over 25 years of CNN polling data.

He is expected to deliver a speech full of triumph. He will likely declare victories on immigration, the economy, and foreign policy. But according to six major polls published in the 72 hours before the address, most Americans are not in a mood to believe him. And the numbers behind that statement are not merely unflattering — they represent a structural erosion of support that no single speech, however polished, is likely to reverse.

So before we hear what Trump plans to say, let’s talk about what the country actually thinks — because that gap, right now, is the real State of the Union.

36%Overall approval rating — CNN/SSRS, Feb 17–20, 2026

-27Net approval (approve minus disapprove) — CNN/SSRS poll

26%Approval among independents — lowest of either of Trump’s terms

-47Net approval among independents — down from -13 just one year ago

57%Say the state of the union is NOT strong — NPR/PBS/Marist poll

55%Say Trump is moving the country in the wrong direction — highest ever recorded by Marist

Donald Trump Has Never Been This Weak Before a SOTU

CNN’s chief data analyst Harry Enten put it with characteristic directness: “Donald Trump has never been weaker going into a State of the Union address, according to our CNN polling, than he is right now — and weaker by a considerable amount.”

That is not just a dramatic line. It is a data-backed statement rooted in a direct comparison across every SOTU Trump has ever delivered. In 2018, his net approval in the CNN poll was -15. In 2019, it was -15 again. In 2020, it was -10. Today, it is -27. So the decline from his best SOTU starting point to his worst is 17 percentage points — and it happened in a single year of his second term.

SOTU YearApproval %Disapproval %Net RatingIndependent Net
201842%57%-15
201943%58%-15
202045%55%-10
Feb 2025 (last Congress address)48%50%-2-13
Feb 24, 2026 (THIS SOTU)36%63%-27-47

For context, Enten notes that George W. Bush and Barack Obama held net approval ratings of -11 and -15, respectively, at this comparable point in their second terms. Trump is at -27 — roughly double the historical average for second-term presidents at the SOTU midpoint. This is not a polling anomaly. It is a consistent, cross-survey pattern.

The Independent Voter Collapse — and Why It Matters

In any election, the battle is won or lost in the centre. Committed partisans do not change their votes — but independent voters do. And right now, Trump’s approval rating among independents has crashed to 26% — the lowest of either of his two terms, and a catastrophic 15-point decline from February 2025, when it stood at 41%.

The net approval figure is even more alarming. Trump’s independent net approval has collapsed from -13 to -47 in twelve months. Enten was blunt about the implication: “When you’re 47 points underwater with independents, that’s the name of the game. You can’t be above water overall.” And this is not merely a theoretical problem. November 2026 is the midterm election. Republicans currently hold a narrow majority in the House — and they need independents to keep it.

Donald Trump has never been weaker going into a State of the Union address, according to our CNN polling, than he is right now — and weaker by a considerable amount. — Harry Enten, CNN Chief Data Analyst, February 23, 2026

Issue by Issue: Where the Polls Are Turning Against Trump

TIME’s pre-SOTU analysis identified the specific policy areas driving the collapse. And the pattern is revealing — because the wounds are coming from issues that were once Trump’s greatest strengths. Immigration and the economy were the twin pillars of his 2024 victory. Both have now turned negative.

Policy AreaApproveDisapproveNetDirection vs 2025
Immigration enforcement38–40%58–60%-20↓ Sharp decline
The economy~35%~62%-16 to -25↓ Declining
Inflation / cost of living~28%~70%-32↓ Worst issue
Tariffs trade policy~30%~60%-30↓ Declining fast
Foreign policy~35%~55%-20↔ Stable negative
US-Mexico border / security~48%~51%-3↑ Best issue

The economy numbers deserve particular attention. A Pew Research poll found that only 28% of Americans believe Trump’s policies have made economic conditions better, while 52% say the administration has made them worse. As TIME reports, roughly two-thirds of Americans describe the economy under Trump as “poor” — broadly in line with views throughout the Biden administration, despite Trump’s repeated insistence that he has “won on affordability.”

The Cost of Living Reality

Ninety-three percent of Americans surveyed say they are “very” or “somewhat” concerned about the price of healthcare. Ninety-two percent say the same about food and consumer goods. These are not partisan numbers. They span every demographic, every region, and every income bracket. And they explain why Trump’s economy messaging — which worked brilliantly as a campaign promise in 2024 — is now generating the opposite effect as a governing record in 2026.

In Their Own Words: How Americans Describe Their President

Perhaps the most striking data point in the entire pre-SOTU polling landscape comes from the Economist/YouGov word association survey, which asked respondents to choose words that describe Trump. The results paint a portrait that is deeply at odds with the image of strength and leadership the White House projects.

🗣️ Words Americans Used to Describe Trump — Economist/YouGov, February 2026

Dangerous — 50%Corrupt — 49%Cruel — 46%Racist — 47%Out-of-touch — 43%Honest — only 21% said YESStrong leader — 40%Decisive — 44%Patriotic — 41%

Only 21% of respondents described Trump as “honest.” That figure is not just low — it is structurally damaging for any president about to deliver the most high-profile address of the year. Because the State of the Union works as political theatre only when the audience believes, at least partly, in the narrator. So when 79% of the country does not consider the speaker honest, the speech faces a credibility deficit before a single word is spoken.

The Democracy Question: A Warning Signal Nobody Is Ignoring

Beyond the economic data and the personal approval numbers, there is a finding from the NPR/PBS/Marist poll that deserves its own paragraph. Seventy-eight percent of Americans say they see a serious threat to the future of American democracy. That is not a partisan finding. It includes 91% of Democrats, 80% of independents, and — remarkably — 61% of Republicans.

⚠️ The Bipartisan Democracy Alarm

When 61% of the president’s own party says they see a serious threat to American democracy, that is not normal political friction. It is a signal that something deeper is shifting — a concern about institutions, checks and balances, and the concentration of power that crosses partisan lines. The same poll found 68% of Americans believe the constitutional system of checks and balances is not working well. These numbers predate and outlast any individual policy debate. They describe a crisis of confidence in governance itself.

The Midterm Shadow Hanging Over the Podium

Trump will not be on the ballot in November 2026. But his approval ratings, his party’s legislative record, and the public mood he has cultivated will be. And TIME reports that the address comes midway between his inauguration and the November midterms — precisely the moment when presidential approval most directly determines congressional outcomes.

CNN’s Harry Enten noted in January that the Republican Party has a “depression problem” heading into the midterms. Their motivation to vote is down 17 points from 2024, while Democratic enthusiasm is actually up compared to the last election cycle. The generic ballot currently shows Democrats ahead by 16 points among the most motivated voters — a number that, if reflected in November results, would almost certainly flip the House.

  • Republicans hold a narrow House majority — and need independents to keep it
  • GOP voter enthusiasm is down 17 points compared to 2024
  • Democratic enthusiasm is up versus 2024 — the reverse of the usual midterm pattern
  • Trump’s approval among voters under 45 has dropped sharply, with particularly steep declines among Latino voters
  • Nearly 3 in 10 Republicans say Trump has not focused enough on the country’s most important problems
  • Only 32% of all Americans say Trump has had the right priorities in office

🗳️ The Midterm Mathematical Reality

No second-term president in modern history has lost more than 30 House seats in the midterms when starting with a net approval of -15 or worse. Trump starts at -27. The historical precedents are stark — and Republicans in competitive districts know it. That quiet anxiety in the Republican caucus is one of the defining subplots of this State of the Union, and it will likely shape how Republican members respond to the address in real time.

Conclusion: A Speech the Nation Is Ready to Fact-Check in Real Time

The State of the Union in jeopardy is not a metaphor. It is a measurable, documented, cross-polled reality. Fifty-seven percent of Americans say the state of the union is not strong. Fifty-five percent say Trump is moving the country in the wrong direction — the highest number Marist has ever recorded across either of his terms. And 53% say his policies have had a mostly negative impact on them personally.

Trump will walk into that chamber tonight projecting confidence, and his base — which remains firm, with 8 in 10 Republicans still supportive — will applaud. But the audience watching at home is not his base. It is the broader American public, 63% of whom disapprove of his performance. And they are watching with the word “honest” already discounted — because only 21% of the country applies it to him.

The great irony of this particular State of the Union is that it arrives at the exact moment when Trump’s legal troubles, economic record, and diplomatic overreach have combined to produce the most vulnerable political moment of his long career. The Supreme Court struck down his central tariff policy three days ago. The trade deficit hit a record $1.2 trillion despite his promises. Manufacturing shed 108,000 jobs. And the one area where he retains relative strength — border security — is now only three points underwater, because that gap, too, has narrowed from where it stood at the start of his second term.

So tonight, a president who has “never been weaker” going into a State of the Union address will tell a deeply sceptical nation that everything is working. The country, by a significant majority, disagrees. And that gap between the speech and the data is, in the most precise and literal sense possible, the real State of the Union in 2026.


Did You Watch the State of the Union? What Did You Think?

The polls set the stage — but your reaction is what matters most. Share your take on tonight’s address in the comments, pass this analysis to someone who needs the full picture, and subscribe to stay ahead of every political development shaping America’s future.💬 Share Your View📩 Subscribe for Updates📤 Share This Article

📚 Sources & References

  1. CNN/SSRS Poll — Trump’s Approval Rating With Independents Hits New Low Ahead of SOTU (February 23, 2026)
  2. HuffPost / CNN — Harry Enten: “Trump Has Never Been Weaker Going Into a State of the Union” (February 23, 2026)
  3. Truthout — Trump’s Pre-SOTU Polling Numbers Among the Worst He’s Ever Had (February 24, 2026)
  4. Newsweek — Donald Trump’s Approval Rating Hits New Low (February 23, 2026)
  5. Newsweek — Trump’s Approval Rating With Independents Hits Record Low Ahead of SOTU (February 24, 2026)
  6. TIME — Trump to Deliver State of the Union With Polls Near Record Low (February 24, 2026)
  7. NPR/PBS/Marist Poll — Most Say the State of the Union Is Not Strong and US Is Worse Off (February 23, 2026)
  8. Washington Post — 6 in 10 Disapprove of Trump Ahead of State of the Union (February 22, 2026)
  9. SSRS — CNN Poll Data: Trump Approval 36%, Independents at 26% (February 23, 2026)
  10. Yahoo News — Trump’s National Approval Rating Underwater Ahead of State of the Union (February 24, 2026)
the epstein files

The Epstein Files: The Reality Hurting Donald Trump’s Net Approval Ratings

Jeffrey Epstein has been dead since August 2019. Yet in the winter of 2026, he may be the single most damaging figure in American politics — not because of what he did in life, but because of what his files reveal in death. The Epstein Files, as millions of pages of Department of Justice documents have come to be known, have done something remarkable: they have become the issue on which Donald Trump polls worse than any other — worse than inflation, worse than healthcare, worse than the economy, worse than immigration.

That is a staggering statement. Donald Trump built his political identity on economic nationalism, immigration enforcement, and a confrontational foreign policy. These are issues he has dominated for a decade. Yet according to a Statista analysis of YouGov polling data, Trump’s net approval rating on his handling of the Epstein investigation sits at -35 percentage points — the lowest score of every major policy area tested, and a number that no amount of economic good news, tariff announcements, or diplomatic summits has been able to meaningfully shift.

This is the full story of how we got here: the files, the promises, the revelations, the administration officials named within them, the cover-up allegations, and what all of it means for a president already grappling with the lowest approval ratings of his second term.

-35Trump’s net approval rating on Epstein handling — his worst issue

63%Of registered voters disapprove of Trump’s handling of the Epstein files (Quinnipiac, July 2025)

50%Of Americans believe Trump is trying to cover up Epstein’s crimes

3M+Pages of Epstein files released by the DOJ on January 30, 2026

3,000+Times Trump’s name appears in the Epstein files

427–1House vote for the Epstein Files Transparency Act — the most bipartisan vote of 2025

The Promise That Became a Trap

To understand the depth of the political damage, you need to understand what Trump promised. During the 2024 presidential campaign, releasing the Epstein files was a populist rallying cry — a promise that “the government was run by powerful people hiding the truth from Americans,” as NPR reported. Trump’s base had spent years immersed in the idea that a shadowy elite — the “deep state,” the globalists, the Democrats — were protecting Epstein’s powerful clients while ordinary Americans were kept in the dark.

Trump positioned himself as the man who would finally throw open the doors. The person who would name names. The outsider who owed nothing to the establishment and would expose it without mercy. It was an enormously powerful political message — and it worked. Voters who cared about the Epstein issue voted for Trump partly on this basis.

And then the files started to come out. And Trump’s name appeared in them. Three thousand times.

Epstein has been dead and gone for years but his tawdry legacy looms large in a country wanting to know more about who he knew and whether secrets have been buried with him. — Quinnipiac University polling director, July 2025

A Law Passed 427 to 1

The political momentum behind transparency became unstoppable during the autumn of 2025. In September, Republican Representative Thomas Massie filed a discharge petition to force a vote on the Epstein Files Transparency Act — a bill requiring the Attorney General to release all Epstein-related files within 30 days. The petition gathered 218 signatures, forcing the vote to the floor. The House passed it 427 to 1. The Senate passed it unanimously. Trump signed it the following day — without reporters present.

That vote — 427 to 1, with the single dissenting vote cast by Republican Clay Higgins of Louisiana — was the most bipartisan act of the 119th Congress. It was also a profound signal: even Trump’s own party was not willing to stand against transparency on this issue. The political cost had become too high, the public demand too overwhelming, and the suspicion of a cover-up too corrosive to ignore.

Trump had opposed the bill before reversing course. That reversal — forced by the sheer weight of Republican defection — was itself a sign of how badly the Epstein issue had eroded his authority, even within his own party.

What the Files Actually Show

The Department of Justice released files in stages. The first batch, on December 19, 2025 — the legal deadline — drew immediate bipartisan fury. Hundreds of pages were entirely blacked out. Less than one percent of the total files had been released. Sixteen files disappeared from the public webpage without explanation less than a day after release. Faulty redaction techniques in the digital files allowed members of the public to recover blacked-out content — revealing information officials had intended to keep hidden.

Then, on January 30, 2026, the DOJ released over 3 million additional pages — including 2,000 videos and 180,000 images. The department declared this its “final” release, asserting it had met its legal obligations. Members of Congress immediately disputed this, noting the department had previously identified over 6 million pages as potentially responsive but released only roughly half that amount.

What Was — and Wasn’t — In the Release

📂 The Missing Files: What Congress Says Is Still Hidden

Representative Ro Khanna of California has publicly stated that FBI witness interview memorandums — in which survivors named other men they were trafficked to — have not been released. “I know from survivors and survivors’ lawyers that when they had these conversations with FBI agents, they specifically named other men,” Khanna said on NPR. “The DOJ has not released a single one.” Khanna threatened to charge Attorney General Pam Bondi with contempt of Congress. After viewing unredacted files, Senator Cynthia Lummis said simply: “Now I see what the big deal is. And the members of Congress that have been pushing this were not wrong.”

Trump has argued the final release “absolves” him of wrongdoing. However, as Wikipedia’s documentation of the Act notes, his name appears over 3,000 times in the files — and Representative Jamie Raskin has claimed it may appear over a million times in unredacted versions, though this has not been independently verified. Trump has never been accused by law enforcement of any wrongdoing connected to Epstein, and has stated he parted ways with Epstein in the mid-2000s because he was a “creep.” He has denied all wrongdoing.

The Approval Rating Collapse — By the Numbers

The polling data on the Epstein files is some of the most damning of Trump’s second term — not just in its headline figures, but in its partisan breakdown. It is the issue that has cracked the loyalty of his own base in ways that few others have managed.

📊 Trump’s Net Approval by Issue (YouGov / Statista, Early 2026)

The Economist/YouGov poll conducted February 6–9, 2026 found that Trump’s net approval on handling the Epstein investigation was -34 — meaning the share who disapprove exceeds the share who approve by 34 percentage points. Half of Americans — 50% — believe Trump is trying to cover up Epstein’s crimes. Only 29% say he is not.

Poll / DateApproveDisapproveNetNotable Finding
Quinnipiac, July 202517%63%-46Republicans split: 40% approve, 36% disapprove
Economist/YouGov, September 202522%57%-35Net approval lowest of all policy areas tested
Economist/YouGov, November 2025-26Improved from -42 low; 81% want all files released
Economist/YouGov, December 202526%55%-2949% dissatisfied with government releases; 67% believe deliberate withholding
Reuters, December 202523%NegativeOnly 23% approve of Trump’s handling of the Epstein case
Economist/YouGov, February 6–9, 2026-3450% believe Trump is covering up Epstein’s crimes

Perhaps the most alarming figure for the White House is the partisan breakdown. Quinnipiac found that in July 2025, Republicans were already splitting on the issue — 40% approving, 36% disapproving of how Trump handled the files. That level of intra-party dissent on a core Trump issue is extraordinary. By November, YouGov found that 73% of Republicans supported releasing all Epstein files — not far behind the 92% of Democrats and 78% of independents who said the same.

The Inner Circle Problem: When the Files Name Your Cabinet

If the approval ratings alone represented the full scope of the political damage, the White House might have managed it. What made the Epstein files uniquely toxic was not merely Trump’s own appearance in the documents — it was the systematic appearance of members of his inner circle, his cabinet, and his closest allies. NBC News confirmed that at least half a dozen senior Trump administration officials appear in the files.

Howard Lutnick: Commerce Secretary

The highest-ranking official outside of Trump himself named in the files. Visited Epstein’s private island in 2012 with his family — a fact he had previously denied. Faced bipartisan calls for resignation. Confirmed the visit under oath in Senate testimony. Trump has stood by him.

Steve Bannon: Former Senior Adviser

Hundreds of friendly text messages with Epstein found in the files, including discussions about Trump. In one, Bannon referred to Trump as a “‘Stable Genius’ bringing himself down.” Epstein sent Bannon an Apple Watch for Christmas 2019, shortly before Epstein’s death.

Elon Musk: DOGE Head / Trump Ally

Emails between Musk and Epstein about a potential island visit appear in the files. In December 2013, Musk wrote asking when to visit. Musk maintains he always refused. Has been vocal on X defending his inclusion in the documents.

John Phelan: Navy Secretary

Name appeared on a March 2006 Epstein flight manifest. Phelan has not been accused of wrongdoing. No explanation for the appearance has been provided by the administration.

Brett Ratner: Director / Melania Doc

Named in several Epstein emails. Directed Melania Trump’s documentary. Was previously accused of sexual misconduct by six women in 2017, which he denied. No wrongdoing related to Epstein has been alleged.

Kevin Warsh: Fed Chair Nominee

Trump’s pick to replace Jerome Powell as Federal Reserve Chair appears in Epstein files on a guest list titled “St. Bart’s.” No wrongdoing alleged. The appearance has raised fresh questions during his confirmation process.

The Lutnick case deserves particular examination because it demonstrates a pattern of misrepresentation that runs through the administration’s entire handling of the Epstein issue. CNN’s review of the Epstein documents found numerous interactions between Lutnick and Epstein: a 2012 island visit, a 2013 joint business venture, a 2015 fundraiser invitation for Hillary Clinton, a $50,000 Epstein donation to a 2017 dinner honouring Lutnick, and a 2018 email exchange about a neighbourhood construction dispute. Yet Lutnick publicly stated in October 2025 that he had cut off all contact with Epstein in 2005. Senator Chris Van Hollen told Lutnick directly: “The issue is not that you engaged in any wrongdoing… it’s the fact that you totally misrepresented the extent of your relationship.”

The Redaction Problem: Fuelling the Cover-Up Narrative

Of all the things that have driven the Epstein issue from a political embarrassment into a genuine approval crisis, nothing has been more damaging than the administration’s handling of the release itself. The pattern has been consistent: promise transparency, deliver redactions, claim compliance, face furious bipartisan pushback, repeat.

  • The December 19, 2025 release — the legal deadline — contained hundreds of pages entirely blacked out, with over 500 pages completely redacted
  • Sixteen files disappeared from the public DOJ webpage within a day of posting, without explanation
  • Faulty digital redactions allowed the public to recover content that officials had tried to hide
  • By early January 2026, less than 1% of the total files had been released, despite the December 19 legal deadline
  • The DOJ later admitted it had not yet internally reviewed at least 2 million of the 5.2–6 million pages it identified as potentially responsive
  • The January 30 “final” release was declared compliant by the DOJ but disputed by multiple members of Congress, including Ro Khanna and Jamie Raskin

A January 2026 CNN poll found that two-thirds of Americans believe the government is deliberately withholding information. That number — 67% — crosses every partisan line. It is the public’s verdict on the transparency effort: insufficient, suspicious, and self-serving.

At the start of 2026, many people agree the government is run by powerful people hiding the truth — and believe that Trump is now one of the powerful few keeping the public in the dark. — NPR analysis, January 2, 2026

Trump himself, asking Americans publicly to “get onto something else”, has unwittingly confirmed what the polls show: he knows this issue is not going away, and he knows why. The administration’s strategy has been to release enough material to claim compliance while withholding the specific categories of documents — particularly FBI witness interview memos — that would most directly implicate named individuals. Whether that constitutes a cover-up in the legal sense remains unanswered. In the political sense, the American public has already rendered its verdict.

The Political Mathematics: Why This Hits Differently

Every president faces disapproval on some issues. What makes the Epstein files uniquely damaging to Trump is a set of factors that combine to make this issue structurally resistant to the usual tools of political management.

It Violates His Core Brand

Trump built his political identity, in part, on the narrative that he was exposing the corrupt elite — “draining the swamp,” giving the people the truth their leaders had hidden. The Epstein files invert this narrative entirely. Instead of being the exposer, he is the exposed. Instead of naming the powerful people who protected Epstein, the powerful people being protected are in his cabinet. TIME Magazine identified the Epstein files specifically as one of the issues that has most significantly contributed to Trump’s approval ratings hitting their lowest point of his second term.

It Fractures the Base

The Nation noted that the share of Republicans saying the Epstein files matter “at least a little” to their assessment of Trump’s presidency dropped from nearly 50% in July 2025 to just 36% by November — suggesting that rather than confronting the issue, a significant portion of the Republican base simply chose to stop caring about it. That is not political resolution. It is political avoidance — and it carries its own long-term costs in terms of credibility and moral authority.

It Cannot Be Blamed on Democrats

The standard Trump political toolkit — attributing bad outcomes to Democrat opposition, media bias, or the “deep state” — struggles against the Epstein files because the Act that forced their release passed 427 to 1, carried largely by Republicans, and was driven by Republican members of Congress including Massie, Marjorie Taylor Greene, and others from Trump’s own ideological coalition. This is not a Democrat attack. It is a demand from within.

🔎 The Structural Political Trap

If Trump releases everything in the files without redaction, he risks political damage from the specific contents — including FBI witness memos that reportedly name individuals not yet publicly implicated. If he withholds, he confirms the cover-up narrative that is already believed by 67% of Americans. There is no release strategy that solves both problems simultaneously. This is not a messaging issue. It is a structural political trap — and the approval ratings reflect the fact that, so far, neither option has been successfully executed.

The Bigger Picture: Epstein in the Context of a Struggling Second Term

The Epstein files do not exist in isolation. They land in the middle of a second term already under significant pressure. As TIME reported, Trump’s approval ratings hit record lows for his second term in December 2025, with the Epstein issue specifically identified alongside inflation, cost of living, and immigration enforcement as key contributors to the decline.

CNBC’s analysis from February 13, 2026 noted that Trump’s iron grip on the Republican Party “might be starting to loosen, just a bit,” with vocal dissenters including Thomas Massie and Thom Tillis more prominent than ever, and daylight emerging between Trump and key congressional allies on both tariffs and the Epstein files simultaneously.

Gallup’s most recent polling found that while 48% of Americans still describe Trump as a “strong and decisive leader,” fewer than one-third — just 30% — believe he is honest and trustworthy. Only 34% say he prioritises the needs of people like them. These numbers tell a story that the Epstein files did not create but have substantially deepened: a perception of a powerful man who says one thing and does another. And in the case of the Epstein files, the gap between what was promised and what was delivered is documented in 3 million pages of government records that anyone with an internet connection can read.

Conclusion: A Dead Man’s Long Political Shadow

Jeffrey Epstein died in August 2019. His death was ruled a suicide — a conclusion that two-thirds of Americans do not accept, that his legal team has contested, and that the government’s own investigators have not resolved to public satisfaction. In death, as in life, Epstein’s most powerful characteristic seems to be his connections — and the discomfort those connections create for the powerful people who had them.

For Donald Trump, the Epstein files have become the defining political albatross of his second term on one specific dimension: trust. The issue scores worse than every other policy area because it is not really about trade policy or healthcare or immigration — issues on which reasonable people disagree. It is about whether a president who promised transparency is delivering it, and whether a man who ran on exposing the corrupt establishment has found himself, documents suggest, deeply embedded within it.

The -35 net approval rating on the Epstein issue is not going to vanish. It will be sustained by continued congressional investigations, by members of Congress who have seen unredacted files and are not satisfied by what has been released, by survivors’ advocates who say the most important documents — the FBI witness interview memos — remain hidden, and by a public that has decided, by a two-thirds majority, that it is being deliberately kept in the dark.

Trump urged Americans to “get onto something else.” More than 3 million pages of government documents, a dead man’s digital footprint, and the most bipartisan congressional vote of 2025 suggest that is precisely what the public is not willing to do.

The Epstein files are not a news story that ends. They are a political wound that compounds — and the polling data, month after month, confirms it.


What Do You Think? Is This the Most Damaging Issue of Trump’s Second Term?

The data says yes. But the story is still unfolding. Share your perspective in the comments, pass this article to someone who needs the full picture, and subscribe to stay ahead of every development as the Epstein files saga continues.💬 Join the Conversation📩 Subscribe for Updates📤 Share This Article

📚 Sources & References

  1. Quinnipiac University National Poll — 63% Disapprove of Trump Handling of Epstein Files (July 2025)
  2. Economist/YouGov Poll — Half of Americans Think Trump Involved in Epstein Crimes (February 6–9, 2026)
  3. Statista — Epstein Files: Trump’s Worst Issue (Net Approval -35)
  4. YouGov — Net Approval of Trump’s Epstein Handling Negative but Rising (November 2025)
  5. TIME — How Americans Are Feeling About Trump as 2025 Comes to a Close (December 27, 2025)
  6. CNBC — Trump Takes a Beating from His Own Party Amid Epstein Files Release and Tariffs Rebuke (February 13, 2026)
  7. NBC News — At Least Half a Dozen Top Trump Administration Officials Appear in Epstein Files (February 14, 2026)
  8. CNBC — Trump Commerce Secretary Lutnick Admits Visiting Epstein Island (February 10, 2026)
  9. CNN — Lutnick’s Epstein Ties Raise Concerns on Wall Street but Not in the White House (February 15, 2026)
  10. CNN — What the Trump Team Claimed vs. What the Epstein Files Show (February 11, 2026)
  11. PBS NewsHour — Epstein Files Reveal Close Ties to Trump’s Influential Inner Circle (February 2026)
  12. NPR — With Few Epstein Files Released, Conspiracy Theories Flourish (January 2, 2026)
  13. NPR — Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick Testifies About Visiting Epstein’s Island (February 11, 2026)
  14. Wikipedia — Epstein Files: Comprehensive Overview (Updated February 2026)
  15. Wikipedia — Epstein Files Transparency Act (Updated February 2026)
  16. CNBC — Epstein Files: Trump, Howard Lutnick, Among Prominent Names in Latest DOJ Release (January 31, 2026)
  17. CNN — Breaking Down Bold-Face Names in the Epstein Files (February 3, 2026)
  18. The Nation — MAGA’s Reaction to the Epstein Files Reveals Total Moral Collapse (February 2026)