You know it’s bad when one of the country’s most venerable polling institutions suddenly decides that it’s seen enough and walks off the stage after 88 years. The development comes just in time for Donald Trump’s State of the Union address, with the president receiving a report card so bad that even lashing out and putting a 15% global tariff on all countries isn’t going to compensate for it. A new Washington Post poll, in conjunction with ABC News and Ipsos, posted on Sunday delivered the kind of numbers that tend to give White House communications directors night sweats. Apparently, around 60 percent of Americans disapprove of Trump’s performance so far, with a brutal 47 percent saying they do so in strong terms. The bleeding isn’t even confined to one issue. Six in ten Americans believe Trump has overstepped his authority with his executive orders. His worst individual rating is on inflation, where only 32 percent approve of his economic strategies. A whopping 70 percent say he’s not trustworthy, while more than 50 percent believe he lacks the mental prowess to lead effectively. Meanwhile, it seems that independent voters, who often decide the fate of important races, have turned sharply against the POTUS. CNN data analyst Harry Enten (per Newsweek) reports that his net approval among independents sits 17 points underwater. As Enten put it: “When you lose the center of the electorate, you lose the American people.” Do we know why Gallup has called it quits? On February 11, the polling giant that has served as American democracy’s unofficial scoreboard since the Roosevelt administration announced that it would no longer track presidential approval ratings. Yes, just like that, 88 years of historical data gathering, has discontinued. Gallup stated that this shift is solely based on their own priorities, but The New York Times this might have to do with Trump increasingly bludgeoning the press with his strongarm tactics. Besides, Trump’s final Gallup approval rating last December sat at 36 percent, which is among the lowest in the organization’s history involving a sitting president. When The Hill asked Gallup point-blank whether the White House had applied pressure, the spokesperson declined to directly deny it. How will Trump circumvent this numbers problem? Why, by doing what any veteran showman does: making you watch the other hand. One institution decided to stop measuring the temperature of this presidency, but we regret to inform you that the fever is still very much there.