The legacy media's favorite talking point about President Donald Trump has always been that he's "divisive" and "polarizing." But three weeks into his second term, it's time to set the record straight with actual facts instead of mainstream media spin.
Trump's first presidency delivered more bipartisan victories than the press wants you to remember. The First Step Act—major criminal justice reform—passed with overwhelming Democratic support. The USMCA trade deal replaced NAFTA with backing from both parties. Infrastructure projects moved forward. Even some Democrats quietly admitted Trump's policies were working.
But here's what really drives the establishment crazy: Trump doesn't play by Washington's corrupt rules. He doesn't cozy up to lobbyists or make backroom deals that sell out American workers. That's not "divisive"—that's exactly what We the People voted for.
The Real Division Comes From the Left
Who actually refused to work with Trump? Remember when Democrats boycotted his inauguration in 2017? When they spent four years screaming "Russia collusion" instead of governing? When they impeached him twice on bogus charges?
The so-called "divisiveness" always seemed to flow one direction—from a Democrat Party that couldn't accept the will of the American people.
"The media calls Trump divisive because he divides them from their power," one GOP strategist told us. "He goes directly to the American people, and that terrifies the establishment."
Now in his second term, Trump is already reaching across the aisle where it makes sense for America. His DOGE initiative with Elon Musk has attracted interest from cost-conscious Democrats. Border security polls well with working-class voters of both parties. Energy independence benefits everyone except the green grifters.
The truth is simple: Trump fights for American workers, American families, and American interests. If that seems "divisive" to the swamp creatures and their media allies, maybe the problem isn't with Trump—maybe it's with them.
Patriots understand the difference between fighting for your principles and being actually divisive. Trump does the former, while his critics have perfected the latter.
