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mercredi 11 mars 2026

Trump Is Over One Year Into his Second Term as President, Grade How Good a Job He Is Doing From A-F. Be Honest.


 President Trump has been crushing it over a year into his second term. From revitalizing the economy to standing firm against global threats, he's earning a solid A grade. His no-nonsense approach has unleashed American potential like never before, proving why we fought to get him back in the White House.


On the border, he's built walls and enforced laws that keep our communities safe and sovereign. Energy policies have us pumping our own oil, slashing costs at the pump and creating blue-collar jobs. Unemployment is down, wages are up—real wins for hardworking families.

Internationally, adversaries know not to mess with us. Trade deals favor America first, and our military is stronger without endless conflicts. Trump's vision is delivering prosperity and peace, making this the comeback story of the century.

The image is familiar: Trump at a presidential seal lectern, arm out, pointing at an audience, Howard Lutnick visible over his shoulder. Above it, that direct ask — ask for a grade, demand honesty — as though the presidency were a pop quiz and 330 million people happen to have different answer keys.

One year and change into the second term, here’s where the marks tend to cluster. On immigration and border enforcement — ICE raids up, encounters down, a big wall finishing program — his base writes A. Civil liberties groups see those same files and write D. On the economy: GDP growth has been okay, inflation cooler than the 2021–22 spike, real wages up modestly; business readers go with B+, labor groups B-. Energy: more leasing, more LNG permits, fewer regulations — industry presses A-, climate hawks C-/D. Foreign policy: continued aid to Ukraine but with more burden-sharing demands, toughened China tariffs, and a June 2025 strike on Iranian nuclear facilities that set back enrichment but raised oversight alarms — experts split between B and C, depending on whether they weight deals or norms.

Then there’s process: more executive orders, more agency turnover, aggressive use of impoundment power that courts are still reviewing. For fans, that’s getting things done; for critics, it’s loose-guarding. Grading that is less about “good” and more about taste.

If I had to put one letter in a box, I’d pick B- — not because I’ve averaged anyone’s homework, but because the growth-and-jobs numbers are decent, the institutional stress is real, and the world hasn’t blown up. Honest enough? Your friends will insist on A. Your uncle will go F. The comments under the image will ignore mine entirely, which is probably the most bipartisan outcome here.

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