President Donald Trump’s second term is increasingly defined by decisions that push the limits of executive power, especially in matters tied to war, immigration, and federal authority. Reuters reported this week that he is under rising pressure over the Iran war, with public support dropping as fuel prices rise and questions grow over how far the administration can go without wider political backing. A Reuters/Ipsos poll published March 24 found his approval rating at 36%, with 61% of respondents disapproving of the Iran strikes.
The deeper issue is not only whether voters support a single action, but what happens when the presidency acts first and other institutions struggle to respond. America’s system was built on checks and balances, not on the assumption that one office should set the pace for everyone else. When those boundaries weaken, the damage can last beyond one administration.

