No president has gotten worse press at the beginning of his term than Donald Trump; indeed, it’s possible no president has ever gotten worse press coverage.

The barrage of stories and counterattacks from the White House on Twitter and TV would lead you to believe this is a presidency in neonatal crisis. Well, guess what: In the realm of public opinion, the bad press is having little to no effect.

Charles Franklin, the majordomo of pollster.com, puts it this way: “The public is close to evenly divided over the president, and [there is] little sign of minds changing after 44 eventful days.” He points out that while Trump entered “office with historically low approval for a new president, his approval and disapproval ratings have been quite stable.”

What are we to make of this? First, it’s an important reminder to those of us who live and breathe the news that we live in (yes) a bubble — only this is not a bubble that prevents unwanted outside information from getting in. Rather, it’s a bubble of the hyper-aware, in which people with a granular interest in news events are associating primarily with others like us at work and on social media.

Those of us who stay informed on a minute-to-minute or hour-to-hour basis are experiencing news events in a manner entirely different from the way the overwhelming majority of Americans experience them.

We see the cascade of daily Trump controversies happening in real time, and the overstimulation is constant. It’s both exhausting and exhilarating, and I don’t think it’s an exaggeration to say we’re on the verge of hysteria for some part of nearly every day.

Social media have only intensified our contacts with each other and the sense that something major is happening every few hours — and that the country is being buffeted about the way we are.

Clearly, it’s not. If you didn’t like Trump on Nov. 8, you don’t like him now — though it’s certainly possible you hate him more than you did. But if you liked Trump on Nov. 8, or if you voted for him even if you didn’t quite like him, your feelings are very different.

What these polls show is that Trump voters are sticking with him. They are giving him a chance. For them, the election just happened, and the idea his administration is on the verge of collapse is ridiculous — after all, he just got there.

He and the media are fighting, but then, they always have. Democrats are screaming bloody murder about him, but then, they always did.

The people who voted for him are neither fans of the media nor fans of the Democrats. Why would his voters and sympathizers be affected by the campaign against him, except perhaps to strengthen their support because they don’t like the people who are shouting the loudest?

For those of us inside the information bubble, these 44-odd days have been very, very long. For people outside it, it’s just been seven weeks and change, during which there was also a great Super Bowl and a crazy Oscar ceremony — not to mention births and deaths, and going to work, and getting the kids to school, and whatever else constitutes a normal life.

Their perspective is more normal. Which isn’t to say it’s the right perspective. Knowing more about what’s going on is not a bad thing, especially when it comes to our leaders, their policies and the behavior of our government. Trump really is off to an unprecedented start, and the result may be disaster for him and for us.

But as long as Trump maintains the decent opinion of the 63 million people who voted for him, he’s not going anywhere — except back and forth to Palm Beach for the weekend.