Many of the dominant images from President Trump’s first 10 days in office make it look as if the country is turning on him. The millions who protested him at women’s marches across the country. The thousands who jammed airports over the weekend to support immigrants and refugees hurt by his travel ban.

Nevertheless, it’s unlikely any of this early backlash will mean much to the swing-state voters who sent Trump to the White House to deliver a message that the political system wasn’t working for them.

“Is the white, blue-collar voter in Pennsylvania going to be upset by all that (turmoil of the first week)? Not at all,” said G. Terry Madonna, director of the Center for Politics and Public Affairs at Franklin & Marshall College and one of Pennsylvania’s leading pollsters.

Trump secured an upset victory in that state by winning over longtime Democratic voters in the steel and coal country of western Pennsylvania after he promised to bring back those jobs without ever offering a plan as to how he would do it.

“They like the language he uses; they like that he wants to put the curbs on immigration. They believe it takes their jobs away,” said Madonna, who runs the Franklin & Marshall poll. “They’re not the people out there demonstrating. They like it, because he’s doing what he said he would be doing.”

Same goes for Wisconsin, another state in the alleged “blue wall” of longtime Democratic-leaning states that were supposedly going to hold the line and enable Hillary Clinton to eke out an electoral college win. Instead, Trump won the state by roughly 22,000 votes of nearly 3 million cast.

“How the economy is doing around September 2018 is going to be a lot more consequential than the optics of this first couple of weeks,” said Charles Franklin, director of the Marquette Law School Poll and professor of law and public policy at the Milwaukee school.

“This controversy may well be helping Trump with his base of supporters,” Franklin said. “It’s hard to believe that any controversy would drive them away from him at all — look at what happened during the campaign.”

Wisconsin exit polls showed that 22 percent of voters didn’t like Trump or Clinton. But 60 percent of those voters backed Trump, and only 22 percent voted for Clinton. Trump, Franklin said, “offered a change they didn’t see Clinton offering.”

Those swing-state voters will stick with Trump until they start getting hit in the pocketbook, analysts said. If the manufacturing jobs he promised don’t materialize, or the improved — and less expensive — health insurance system he promised doesn’t help them, then Trump might face political blowback, they said.

But don’t look for those signs of discontent for at least another year or so, Franklin said.

Meanwhile, Republican Party officials are using this moment to raise funds, portraying the wealthy businessman as under siege from the political left and the media. A fundraising email Monday from the Republican National Committee urged supporters to send money before the first Federal Election Commission deadline.

“President Trump needs your help right now. The media, Hollywood elites, and Democrats have been distorting the president’s policies and deceiving the American people,” the RNC email said. “And at this very moment, we have less than 30 hours until our FIRST end-of-month FEC deadline.

“If we don’t end the month strong, the media will use it against us as proof that the American people are not behind Trump’s presidency,” the RNC pitch said.

The battle between Trump and the media “in many ways is galvanizing” for the president and his supporters, said Lanhee Chen, a chief policy adviser on Mitt Romney’s 2012 presidential campaign and a health care official in George W. Bush’s administration.

“For the White House, it creates this us-versus-them dichotomy, and the mainstream media falls into the ‘them’ category,” said Chen, a research fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University.

“Being in California, we can lose sight of just how much support there is for the president in some other parts of the country,” Chen said. “They may be willing to give him the benefit of the doubt because they see someone who is acting. And that is what the White House wants to show — the image of a president who is acting, not someone who is debating a lot of options and hesitating.”

To GOP voters everywhere, including California, Trump gave the impression that he was moving quickly in his first week by signing a slew of executive orders — some powerful, others little more than political theater.

“It’s amazing the difference between the pace of a politician and the pace of a nonpolitician,” said West Walker, chairman of Californians for Trump, a 30,000-member grassroots group that organized online in the early days of his candidacy. “He’s able to take care of business.”

“These (protesters) are people who are going to be against Trump no matter what he says,” said Walker, who lives in Tracy. “They’re not going to change their attitude no matter what his policies are.”

And Trump wants to make sure voters in the former blue-wall states continue to back him. On Thursday, he will make his first speech on the road as president in Milwaukee, his second stop in the city since winning the election.

“To me,” Franklin said, “it says this White House is keeping an eye on the voters who put them there.”