The rise of the regretful Trump voter
Trump is squandering one of his biggest 2024 electoral accomplishments.by Christian Paz
Updated May 13, 2025 at 2:51 PM EDT

Sharita White, a Philadelphia resident and former Democrat, cast her vote for Donald Trump last year. Now, she’s one of the many recent additions to the Republican electoral coalition who is second-guessing their Trump votes.
Christian Paz/Vox

PHILADELPHIA — In September 2024, Sharita White made a desperate choice. After supporting Democrats in previous presidential election cycles, the 37-year-old Black Philadelphian decided she would cast her ballot for Donald Trump.
Her life during the Biden years had taken a frustrating turn: Her husband had died, she’d lost her job, and she was forced to move with her kids to a Philly neighborhood notorious for crime and fentanyl addiction. With a son with a chronic ailment, her tight food budget had been padded by pandemic stimulus checks. With those gone, and high inflation pushing up the cost of living, life felt drastically different.
When Trump was in the chair, Black people was up, and I want Trump back in the chair because I’ve been struggling ever since he’s been out of the chair,” she told me and Today, Explained producer Miles Bryan last fall in front of a cheesesteak shop where Republican operatives were campaigning for Black voters.
When November came, she joined millions of other Black, Latino, and young voters who broke with Democrats and cast their votes for Trump. Voters like Sharita White — disengaged, historically Democratic, and frustrated with the status quo — powered a historic red shift in Democratic strongholds across the country, helping Trump sweep Electoral College battlegrounds and win the popular vote.
But eight months later, White told us she feels even worse. “I just see things just keep rising and stuff, and things does not look like they’re getting better and stuff,” she said when we caught up with her at her Northeast Philly home in May. “Because at this point, it’s like nothing is getting better. And the economy is getting worse.”
She regrets her vote for Trump. And she’s not alone.
Across a range of polling averages and survey data, a similar picture is developing. Black, Latino, and young voters are turning sharply against him, reversing the gains he made throughout 2024 with traditionally Democratic voting groups.
Trump created a multiracial, working-class, Republican coalition. But just three and a half months into this presidency, that coalition looks like it’s falling apart.
The data shows a steady drift away from Trump among his 2024 coalition
Trump was elected president in no small part because his campaign’s unconventional wager paid off. His team bet that by focusing on the economy, inflation, and immigration — and by bringing that message to non-traditional media platforms and to places where Republicans typically struggle — they might activate a coalition of the disaffected.It worked in November. But now, his perceived inability to deliver on this seems to be fueling the great unraveling of this coalition. Trump’s overall job approval and personal favorability ratings have steadily dropped, largely because voters disapprove of and distrust his handling of the economy.