Michiganders have a lot of words when it comes to describing the first 100 days of President Donald Trump’s second term in office. Here are a handful:
Alarming. Chaotic. Dynamic. Glorious. Extraordinary. Evil.
At a rally at Macomb Community College on April 29, Trump celebrated his crossing the 100-day mark, returning to the stage in a state he has repeatedly campaigned in and vied for as a victorious hero, depicting his still-nascent second term to date as an unequivocal success, an unrivaled achievement, a national rebirth.
“After 100 days back in the White House, America is a free, proud and sovereign nation once more and our magnificent destiny is closer than ever before,” he said. “Our golden age has only just begun.”
And yes, the Free Press heard much the same from many Michiganders in the last month. From Erica Rodriguez, 45, of Midland, who said Trump came into office “with guns blazing” and from Roxanne Jabalee, 66, of St. Clair Shores, who called the president and his first 100 days, “brilliant.”
But a lot of other words and feelings were also employed to describe Trump’s baldly aggressive approach and historic attempt to remake the federal government, and the worldwide economic order, in the few months since he was inaugurated on Jan. 20. Many were not nearly so unanimous, so glowing, so kind.
“Wake up, America, before he crashes everything,” said Jerry Catlin, 78, of Lapeer.
Over the last several weeks, more than four dozen reporters from the Detroit Free Press, Lansing State Journal and Center for Community Journalism – Michigan talked to over 100 people representing a diverse selection of residents from every region, political leaning and background. The result is a series of brief interviews that offer a sketch of how Trump’s agenda and efforts are being received in a key swing state that last year for the second time helped elect him as president (and in the intervening term helped defeat him).
The hope is that, when viewed as a whole, it will be akin to an impressionist painting, portraying something more nuanced and complete than any single interview, and less reductive and reactionary than any single political rally when it comes to gauging reaction to Trump’s second first 100 days. The hope is also that it shows the scope of how widely Michiganders differ and that, while their concerns for the future and their appreciation or antipathy for the administration vary wildly, there is also an ideological, philosophical or moral diversity that should be acknowledged.
Take, for instance, Barbara Ritch, a 75-year-old living in Holly. She’s been worried about the number of immigrants unlawfully entering the country and cheered on Trump’s efforts to protect the border and deport illegal migrants. “He’s doing what he said he would do,” she said. “His promises are being fulfilled.”
Or take Betty Romo, 40, of Lincoln Park, who moved to Michigan decades ago from Jalisco, Mexico. She didn’t vote but sees what’s happening in government as deeply sad. “My heart aches for my community, for the fear we live with every day. The uncertainty about our future, about whether we’ll be safe or allowed to stay, makes me feel helpless,” she said.
Or take AJ Whitehead, a 21-year-old junior Michigan State University student from Warren. A Black man who voted for Democratic nominee Vice President Kamala Harris, he’s concerned about the cost of living, lost opportunity and political divisiveness in an atmosphere where the president has moved to strip away efforts to promote and protect diversity and equality. “The whole Trump administration doesn’t make it seem like I have a secure future in a way,” he said. “I don’t really know what my future holds.”
President Trump’s first one hundred days in one word
Reporters across the state ask Michigan residents how they would describe President Trump’s first one hundred days in office, in one word.
And on it goes. From a lifelong Republican like 66-year-old Penny Swan in Hillsdale who voted third-party last year because she disagrees with what she considers a cruel immigration policy that threatens to sweep up and deport Americans, to Amy Barbieri, a small business owner in Warren who considers herself more of a Democrat but voted for Trump in the last two elections, and who now says tariffs and concerns over the future of TikTok (which she used to make sales) have ruined her business. “So, no, I’m not a Trump supporter anymore,” she said.
Carol Kuhn, an 84-year-old retired autoworker from Oxford, has been thrilled with the first months of Trump’s second term so far. “Every morning I get up, I thank God that President Trump is our president and we don’t have to have what we had for four years,” she said, referring to former President Joe Biden’s term.
In Hamtramck, 37-year-old Kate Mason, a Democrat who supported Harris described the Trump administration as a “dumpster fire” that’s “dismantling democracy right in front of us.”
“We’re gonna have to do a reckoning on the left and figure out how we come back from this,” she said.
And on it goes, in a state and a country where Trump’s bold approach to his second term has people amazed, shocked, stunned, elated. Here’s a chance, below, to look at all of those interviews, divvied by region, with more than 100 Michiganders and what they had to say about the president’s second term to date, how far it’s gone and what they think about where it might be headed.
Read all 100 interviews by region:
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This series was reported by: Dana Afana, Lily Altavena, Sarah Atwood, Tresa Baldas, Duante Beddingfield, Dave Boucher, Lisa Vidaurri Bowling, Jackie Charniga, Natalie Davies, Paul Egan, Eric Guzmán, Christina Hall, Brad Heineman, Clara Hendrickson, Brendel Hightower, Johnathan Hogan, Violet Ikonomova, Cassidey Kavathas, Georgea Kovanis, Jamie L. LaReau, Eric D. Lawrence, Arpan Lobo, Keith Matheny, Sarah Moore, Darcie Moran, David Rodriguez Muñoz, Corey J. Murray, David Panian, Jenna Prestininzi, Nour Rahal, Nushrat Rahman, Liam Rappleye, Don Reid, JC Reindl, Adrienne Roberts, Andrea May Sahouri, Beki San Martin, Susan Selasky, Kristen Jordan Shamus, Scott Talley, Kristi Tanner, Connor Veenstra, Tess Ware, Niraj Warikoo, Jalen Williams, John Wisely, Suzanne Nolan Wisler and Frank Witsil.