Is Government Trust at an All Time Low?

If you look at long-term polling data, public trust in government has been declining for decades, but the story isn’t as simple as “it’s the worst ever.”

According to the Pew Research Center, trust in the U.S. federal government has hovered near historic lows since the 2008 financial crisis. In Canada, data from Statistics Canada shows declining institutional confidence following the pandemic, though levels still fluctuate depending on political leadership and major events. But here’s the nuance: trust often drops during periods of economic instability, political scandal, or social change, and then partially rebounds. The 1970s Watergate era, for example, also saw dramatic declines in trust.

So maybe the better question is:
Is trust structurally eroding long-term, or are we just in another downturn cycle?

I’d argue social media amplification and partisan news ecosystems have intensified distrust in a way that may be harder to reverse than in previous decades. What do you think — is this temporary, or systemic?