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Trump presidency enters second year with supporters urging domestic focus
Summary
Reuters interviewed 20 Trump voters who largely praised his first-year record but urged him to tone down rhetoric and prioritize domestic issues such as clearer pathways to legal status for law‑abiding immigrants, healthcare reform, reducing waste and lowering the national debt.
Content
Reuters spoke with 20 Trump voters as the president begins his second year in office. Most of those interviewed praised his first-year performance but also raised concerns. They asked for a quieter tone from the president and a stronger focus on domestic issues. Several voters said they wanted clearer pathways to legal status for law‑abiding immigrants, healthcare reform, measures to curb waste and fraud, and steps to reduce the national debt.
Voters' priorities:
- Reuters interviewed the same group of 20 Trump voters monthly; six expressed almost no criticism, three were highly dissatisfied, and 11 gave mixed reviews.
- The most common priorities were immigration reform and a sharper focus on domestic issues, including healthcare, cutting fraud in public programs, and lowering the national debt.
- Fourteen voters said they were disappointed by the president's recent rhetoric about annexing foreign countries and by inflammatory social media posts.
- Several interviewees urged clearer pathways to legal status for law‑abiding immigrants; U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement data cited in the article noted about 60,000 people detained in late January, with roughly 44% reported as having no pending criminal charge or prior conviction.
- Some voters praised deregulatory moves and tax cuts but questioned the impact on the federal deficit and expressed concern about large proposed increases in military spending; the White House said the administration remains focused on cooling inflation, accelerating growth, securing the border, and deporting criminal illegal aliens.
Summary:
The voters Reuters interviewed emphasized domestic policy and a reduction in divisive rhetoric as key priorities for the president's second year, and these views are set against growing political pressure ahead of November's midterm elections. Undetermined at this time.
