America
First? Some Trump Supporters Worry That’s No Longer the Case.
President
Trump has been dining with billionaires and has taken a keen interest in crises
overseas, leading to fears that he is drifting away from his more populist
stances.
Zolan
Kanno-YoungsTyler Pager
By Zolan
Kanno-Youngs and Tyler Pager
Zolan
Kanno-Youngs and Tyler Pager are White House correspondents.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/14/us/politics/trump-supporters-america-first-concerns.html
Nov. 14,
2025
President
Trump has been dining with Wall Street bigwigs. He has embarked on an opulent
revamp of the White House at a time when Americans are struggling to pay their
bills. He has expressed support for granting visas to skilled foreigners to
take jobs in the United States. He approved a $20 billion bailout for
Argentina, helping a foreign government and wealthy investors at a moment when
the U.S. government was shut down.
For a
president who returned to office promising to avoid foreign entanglements, make
life more affordable and ensure that available jobs go to American citizens, it
has been a significant departure from the expectations of his loyal base. And
it is starting to open a rift with his supporters who were counting on a more
aggressively populist agenda.
The
divisions within Mr. Trump’s movement, spawned by his own actions, have been
only amplified by the latest developments on a story that he has been doing his
best to quash: his relationship with the convicted sex offender Jeffrey
Epstein.
Much of
the president’s MAGA movement, and many of his top aides, pushed for years for
all the investigative files on the Epstein case to be made public, insisting
that a rich and well-connected man — and his network of wealthy and powerful
friends — needed to be held accountable for any abuse of young women.
But Mr.
Trump, who has emphatically denied any involvement in or knowledge of Mr.
Epstein’s sex-trafficking operation, showed again this week that he was
resisting further disclosures, leaving a small but vocal group of Republicans
angry over his about-face, and risking a further rupture in the movement
heading into next year’s midterm elections.
“When
they’re protecting pedophiles, when they are blowing our budget, when they are
starting their wars overseas, I’m sorry, I can’t go along with that,”
Representative Thomas Massie, Republican of Kentucky, said on CNN this week.
“And back home, people agree with me. They understand. Even the most ardent
Trump supporters understand.”
Trump
allies are aware that his more populist message has become muddled in recent
months, as the president has spent time courting wealthy donors and making no
secret of his desire to win a Nobel Peace Prize for his work on foreign
conflicts.
Mr. Trump
told aides recently that he might attend the annual World Economic Forum in
Davos, Switzerland, a gathering of the political and business elite, according
to two people familiar with the matter. Some of his advisers, however, feel
such a trip would send the wrong message at a moment when they are trying to
recapture a political edge on the economy.
And as
some Republicans called on Mr. Trump to become more involved in negotiations to
end the longest government shutdown in American history, he largely kept the
issue at a distance. During that time, he hosted dinners for wealthy donors of
his ballroom project, provided social media updates about his White House
bathroom renovation and held a lavish “Great Gatsby” Halloween party with the
theme “a little party never killed nobody.”
In recent
days, particularly as the shutdown has come to an end, his administration has
shifted to talking more about affordability. That was the main message coming
out of the White House on Wednesday, when Congressional lawmakers released the
latest trove of Epstein emails.
“As the
architect of the MAGA movement, President Trump will always put America First,”
Abigail Jackson, a White House spokeswoman, said in a statement. “Every single
day he’s working hard to continue fulfilling the many promises he made and he
will continue delivering.”
Mr. Trump
has repeatedly insisted, wrongly, that grocery prices are down. He has teased a
50-year mortgage plan, which critics point out would do nothing to address the
supply of homes; and has floated $2,000 payments funded by his tariffs. But
details over who will be eligible for the money and when Americans can expect
checks remain unclear.
The
economy has become all the more urgent after last week’s elections, when
Democrats scored important victories by seizing on concerns about the cost of
living.
“The
White House is clearly not the best at selling economic ideas,” said Stephen K.
Bannon, Mr. Trump’s former chief strategist, adding that he had urged the White
House to host more domestic officials in the Oval Office.
He noted
that, as Democrats swept to their electoral victories last week, Mr. Trump met
with officials from Central Asia, Hungary and Syria.
“If
you’re going to have the president of Syria, that’s fine,” Mr. Bannon said. He
added: “Next one’s domestic. One Syria, next one’s domestic.”
When
asked on Monday about Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene, Republican of
Georgia, who recently said she would like to see a plan put forth on health
care and “nonstop meetings” at the White House on “domestic policy not foreign
policy,” Mr. Trump told reporters that his onetime ally had “lost her way.”
“When
you’re president, you really sort of have to watch over the world because
you’re going to be dragged into it,” said Mr. Trump, who argued in his first
term that the United States could no longer be a “policeman of the world.”
“When
somebody makes a statement about, ‘he’s devoting time to the world,’ well the
world is the United States,” he added.
Dave
Carney, a Republican strategist who ran Preserve America, a pro-Trump super
PAC, said he could understand the frustration with Mr. Trump’s focus on foreign
affairs, but he said it was simply one part of the president’s agenda.
“There’s
not a domestic agenda and a foreign policy agenda that are separate,” he said.
“They are all part of making America better and saving money.”
Mr. Trump
has brushed off the idea that there are any significant splits in his base.
“Don’t
forget, MAGA was my idea,” Mr. Trump told Laura Ingraham of Fox News this week.
“I know what MAGA wants better than anybody else.”
Ms.
Ingraham was pressing Mr. Trump over how his support for welcoming hundreds of
thousands of Chinese students into the United States was a “pro-MAGA position,”
given his campaign promises to tighten immigration to the United States.
“I want
to be able to get along with the world,” Mr. Trump said.
He later
argued in favor of providing H-1B visas for highly skilled immigrant workers
because Americans lacked “certain talents.” That visa program has pitted
immigration hard-liners — many of whom voted for Mr. Trump for his tough stance
on the issue — against tech industry leaders, who say they cannot find enough
qualified American workers.
And while
Mr. Trump and his aides have argued that he has successfully secured peace and
trade deals overseas that will help Americans in the long run, some of Mr.
Trump’s supporters see a break from his “America First” pledge.
Recent
polling suggests his approval is down. According to an AP-NORC poll, 33 percent
of American adults approve of the way Mr. Trump is managing the government,
down from 43 percent earlier this year. About 68 percent of Republicans said
they approved of Mr. Trump’s management, down from 81 percent in March.
Kevin
Hassett, the director of the White House National Economic Council,
acknowledged on Thursday that there was economic anxiety across the nation.
“We
understand that people understand, as people look at their pocketbooks to go to
the grocery store, that there’s still work to do,” Mr. Hassett said. He said
the drop in real purchasing power in recent years was “something that we’re
going to fix, and we’re going to fix it right away.”
David
Lapan, who recently left his position as senior adviser to the under secretary
for benefits at the Department of Veterans Affairs, said he felt Mr. Trump had
drifted away from important campaign pledges now that he was in office.
“The
messaging before was a means to an end to get elected, but once elected that
can all fall by the wayside,” said Mr. Lapan, who has also worked for the
Homeland Security Department and the Pentagon.
Mr. Lapan
noted that many of the veterans who might have been energized by Mr. Trump’s
campaign rhetoric relied on the food stamps he had fought against funding now
that he was back in office.
“Now that
he’s in office, the mask comes off and it’s all about taking care of himself
and fellow billionaires and millionaires,” Mr. Lapan said. “He’s an elitist.”
Zolan
Kanno-Youngs is a White House correspondent for The Times, covering President
Trump and his administration.
Tyler
Pager is a White House correspondent for The Times, covering President Trump
and his administration.


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