Best findings: We asked 2,300 Americans about the best and worst things Trump has done

Best findings: We asked 2,300 Americans about the best and worst things Trump has done

A cluster of recent headlines has framed the conversation about former President Trump this week. The headline that begins "We asked 2, 300 Americans about the best and worst things Trump has done. Here’s what they said. " was published 7 hours ago and centers the question of what voters view as the best and worst of his record.

Poll of 2, 300 Americans

The headline quoting a sample of 2, 300 Americans focuses explicitly on the balance of likes and dislikes about Trump’s time in office, asking respondents to weigh the best and worst things he has done. That headline was published 7 hours ago, presenting the poll number up front and setting a snapshot for public opinion.

State of the Union tough sell

Another headline, headlined "The Odds: Trump's "State of the Union" tough sell, " sketches a separate angle: the political climate around a State of the Union-style address and the challenges it faces. That item was published yesterday and frames the address as a difficult proposition.

Public priorities: 68% view

A third headline carries the explicit finding that "68% of Americans Say Trump Has the Wrong Priorities. " That headline was published 11 hours ago and places a numerical measure — 68% — at the center of the coverage, asserting a clear majority assessment of priority alignment.

Best and worst framing in headlines

Taken together, the three headlines present three linked but distinct threads: a detailed poll of 2, 300 Americans about the best and worst of Trump's record, an assessment that a State of the Union-style event is a tough sell, and a pointed figure — 68% — declaring that Trump has the wrong priorities. Each headline was published within a roughly one-day window: one 7 hours ago, one yesterday, and one 11 hours ago.

What the timing shows

The clustering of publication times — 7 hours ago for the poll headline, yesterday for the State of the Union piece, and 11 hours ago for the 68% headline — suggests the conversation is active and shifting across multiple angles. The poll’s explicit sample size, the odds story’s focus on messaging, and the 68% priority measure all appear as distinct inputs into a broader public debate.

Each headline supplies a discrete fact: the poll involves 2, 300 Americans, one headline frames a State of the Union as a tough sell, and another places 68% as the figure saying Trump has the wrong priorities. Taken together, they form the latest public-facing record shaping discussion in the near term.

Closing: The three recent headlines — the 2, 300-person poll published 7 hours ago, the State of the Union odds piece published yesterday, and the 68% priority finding published 11 hours ago — together map the current media emphasis on how Americans evaluate Trump’s actions and messaging.