Rage to Resignation: Job Fears Under Trump vs. Biden
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Key Takeaways
- Despite reported low unemployment rates, voters still distrust official job market narratives and demand real, stable employment.
- Trump retains symbolic trust on labor issues, but execution failures and rising automation fears are testing Americans' goodwill.
- Public frustration has shifted from partisan outrage under Biden to structural disillusionment across all voter groups.
Our Methodology
Demographics
All Voters
Sample Size
3,100
Geographical Breakdown
National
Time Period
7 Days
MIG Reports leverages EyesOver technology, employing Advanced AI for precise analysis. This ensures unparalleled precision, setting a new standard. Find out more about the unique data pull for this article.
Public sentiment around the job market is increasingly defined by distrust and narrative complexity. Despite low official unemployment, many Americans feel left behind in an economy marked by gig work, automation fears, and policy fatigue.
The economic conversation is shaped by four overlapping storylines:
- Trump’s renewed tariff and layoff policies
- The acceleration of AI-driven disruption
- Concerns about manipulated job data
- Rising frustration over partisan gridlock in Congress.
Together, these forces drive a narrative of distrust, fatigue, and unmet expectations.
Voter Sentiment
MIG Reports data on job market sentiment shows:
- Negative Sentiment: 42% — Emphasizing economic insecurity, job losses, and policy failure
- Positive Sentiment: 33% — Highlighting job growth stats and perceived recovery
- Neutral Sentiment: 25% — Focused on data sharing and historical comparisons without ideological tone
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Key Findings and Themes
Low Trust in Official Job Market Narratives
Many Americans believe unemployment figures are massaged to fit political narratives. Voters emphasize that real-life experiences with layoffs, contract work, and stagnant wages often contradict official reports. There are common refrains like, "everyone I know is struggling," dismissing unemployment rates as politically convenient fiction.
Tariffs Polarize Public
Trump’s reintroduction of aggressive trade measures is also dividing voter sentiments. While many support the concept of economic nationalism, others voice concern that poor enforcement, legal reversals, and retaliatory costs are undermining results. A recurring grievance is the clash between executive ambition and legislative inertia.
Government Spending and Layoffs
Defunding Job Corps and mass firings within agencies like the Department of Energy are causing backlash among many voter groups. While many in Trump’s base celebrate dismantling bureaucratic excess, others argue these cuts harm working-class Americans. Voters almost universally express frustration with Congress for contining to fund elite perks while undercutting programs that once provided upward mobility.
AI and Automation as Growing Threats
Anxiety over job loss due to AI and automation is growing. Workers across industries report being displaced or sidelined. Public frustration is mounting over what many call a lack of serious planning for the future of work. Voters see Trump as more attuned to the problem than Biden, but most are still losing patience with rhetoric lacking results.
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Sentiment Now Versus Last Year
Previous MIG Reports analysis showed, in late 2024, voter sentiment focused on only 12,000 new jobs created in a month—most of which were government jobs. Last year, there was strong outrage toward the Biden administration and its inaccurate data.
Now in June 2025, sentiment is more diffuse. While jobs have returned on paper, many voters describe them as unfulfilling, short-term, or economically insufficient. A sense of betrayal has expanded beyond Democrats to include both parties and the institutions managing economic policy.
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Sentiment Impact of Biden vs. Trump
Under Biden, employment sentiment was driven by accusations of data manipulation and short-term government hires. Voters were quick to call out "fake growth" and low-quality jobs, especially as inflation rose alongside job reports.
Under Trump, expectations have shifted. His base wants results, not slogans. While many appreciate his aggressive stance on trade and bureaucracy, they also note failures like court blocks on mass firings, inconsistent tariff policies, and a lack of clarity on how his policies will handle automation.
Still, Trump enjoys relatively stronger trust. The phrase "at least he fights for us" is common among conservatives, Independents, and the working class. But symbolic trust is conditional—and eroding.
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Voter Commentary Highlights
In discussions about both presidents, there are recurring sentiments or phrases. Some of these include:
On Biden
- “Government jobs aren’t real jobs.”
- “The numbers lie. Everyone I know is struggling.”
On Trump
- “At least Trump’s trying to bring jobs back.”
- “I want the tariffs to work, but not like this.”
- “He talks about jobs, but I want to see factories reopening.”
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