Most Americans say Trump is growing erratic with age, poll finds
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US President Donald Trump's overall popularity has been little changed in recent months.
PHOTO: REUTERS
WASHINGTON – Six in 10 Americans, including a significant slice of Republicans, think President Donald Trump has become erratic as he ages, according to a new Reuters/Ipsos poll.
The six-day poll concluded on Feb 23, the day before the 79-year-old president gives his annual State of the Union address to Congress
Overall, 61 per cent of respondents in the poll said they would describe Mr Trump as having “become erratic with age”. Some 89 per cent of Democrats, 30 per cent of Republicans and 64 per cent of independents described him this way. The White House did not respond to a request for comment.
Mr Trump’s overall popularity has been little changed in recent months. Some 40 per cent of respondents in the latest poll approved of Mr Trump’s performance as president, up two percentage points from earlier in February. While he started his term with a considerably higher rating at 47 per cent, his approval has held within a point or two of its current level since April.
Ageing US leadership
Most Americans think the country’s political leadership is generally too old.
Some 79 per cent of poll respondents agreed with a statement that “elected officials in Washington, DC, are too old to represent most Americans”. The average age in the US Senate is about 64, and in the US House of Representatives, it is 58.
Democratic respondents were slightly more likely to call for younger politicians, with 58 per cent of them saying top Senate Democrat Chuck Schumer, 75, was too old to work in government.
Mr Trump returned to office in January 2025 crack down on unauthorised immigration
He has often struck an angry tone in his public remarks, including last week when he said he was “absolutely ashamed” that the conservative-leaning US Supreme Court struck down many of his tariffs as illegal
Mr Trump went on to reinstate a series of new tariffs
Age weighed predecessor Biden
Mr Trump won the 2024 presidential election
Only 45 per cent of respondents in the February poll said they would describe Mr Trump as “mentally sharp and able to deal with challenges”, down from 54 per cent in a Reuters/Ipsos poll conducted in September 2023.
Republicans continue to see the President as sharp, with 81 per cent of them describing the President that way in the latest poll, little changed from the 2023 survey.
Among Democrats, the share seeing the President able to deal with challenges fell to 19 per cent from 29 per cent. Among people who do not identify with either political party, 36 per cent saw Mr Trump holding onto his mental acuity, down from 53 per cent in 2023.
The latest Reuters/Ipsos poll, which was conducted online, surveyed 4,638 US adults nationwide and had a margin of error of two percentage points. REUTERS


