Only 39 percent think he has brought the change to Washington that he promised. Fifty-nine percent do not.

Most striking, an overwhelming majority (66 percent to 28 percent) think Trump is dividing the country. An astounding 84 percent of nonwhite voters think he has done more to divide us than unite us; more than 60 percent of voters in every educational level (high school or less up through postgraduate degree) agree. White men with no college degree — maybe his most devoted group — think he’s not dividing us, but by a small margin of 49 percent to 42 percent. What’s more, “Among those who approve of Trump — 39 percent of respondents, far fewer than other recent presidents at this point in a presidency — about 1 in 5 think he has done more to divide than to unite. Even 1 in 7 of those who approve of Trump strongly seem him as more of a divider than a uniter.” Again, all this came before this weekend’s clash with the NFL and several NBA stars.

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When it comes to our most immediate foreign policy challenge:

Two-thirds of Americans oppose launching a preemptive military strike against North Korea, with a majority trusting the U.S. military to handle the escalating nuclear crisis responsibly but not President Trump, a new Washington Post-ABC News poll finds. . . . The Post-ABC poll finds 37 percent of adults trust Trump either “a great deal” or “a good amount” to responsibly handle the situation with North Korea, while 42 percent trust the commander in chief “not at all.” By comparison, 72 percent trust U.S. military leaders, including 43 percent saying they trust them “a great deal.”

Even on the economy (43/49), when growth and markets are on the rebound, fewer voters approve than disapprove. All of immigration flip-flopping has left him with only 35 percent approval on that issue.