When did "Trump fatigue" start to become a factor for voters?

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SWE:
11/9/2016

Vice President Christian Man:
I'd say the pandemic was likely the tipping point, although he was steadily losing support since he entered office. If anything the Summer of 2020 prevented him from doing any worse in the Midwest or Southeast.

Lord Admirale:
I think I left him in July 2017 (Charlottesville-ish) and had been losing interest since May.

Mr. Smith:
Never:  The people tired of him were already tired of him, and the rest were his fans.

The only difference Trump was proven to win this time, unlike 2016, hence the third parties.

Hope For A New Era:
Quote from: Sir Mohamed 🇺🇸 🇺🇦 on December 09, 2022, 10:40:33 AM

Around Charlottesville. I think there was some goodwill into the spring of 2017 and after Charlottesville and the Obamacare debacle, it changed. In late 2017, Trump was extremely unpopular.



It's strange how it didn't feel that remarkable at the time, but late July to late August 2017 was a really bad time for the Trump presidency. First ACA, then Charlottesville, then all the North Korea nonsense.

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