As Donald Trump gets ready to deliver his State of the Union address, the occasion has led many to reflect on the state of his presidency. White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders recently told reporters, with a straight face, “I don’t think anyone can argue it is probably one of the most successful first years in office.”
Alternatively, I think nearly everyone can argue it wasn’t a successful first year at all. In fact, as the Associated Press noted, the president will deliver his remarks from “a remarkably weak position.”
Considering the strength of the economy, Trump will step before lawmakers Tuesday night in a remarkably weak position. His approval rating has hovered in the 30s for much of his presidency and at the close of 2017, just 3 in 10 Americans said the United States was heading in the right direction, according to a poll by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research. In the same survey, 67 percent of Americans said the country was more divided because of Trump.
At a certain level, it may be tempting to stop there. After all, at this stage, Trump is the least popular president since the dawn of modern polling, and it’s awfully difficult to make the case that he’s succeeding if the American electorate is rejecting him en masse.
But the president’s public standing is really just the start of the conversation. A variety of members of Trump’s campaign team, for example, are currently under criminal indictment, and his former White House national security advisor has already pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI.
The president himself is under a federal investigation for obstruction of justice. Trump is also at the center of a serious scandal that may yet end his presidency prematurely.
His sole legislative accomplishment is an unpopular package of tax breaks for the wealthy and big corporations, which were rammed through Congress with little thought and no regard for the fact that the plan was the opposite of what the American mainstream actually wanted.









