I am a young-ish well-educated foreigner living in Europe so I tend to hear only liberal views. The mainstream opinion of Trump (even from right-wing newspapers) isn't positive.
I'm a liberal in a fundamental sense (e.g. do what you want if it doesn't harm people, equality of outcome is good if possible, many rich people got rich undeservingly, discrimination against minorities is real, feminism good), even though I have disagreements with other liberals:
(1) geopolitics are run along cynical self-interested lines ("is", not "ought")
(2) it is quite likely that different groups of people have different outcomes in terms of income, academic achievement, crime, etc., that aren't purely the product of discrimination
(3) "tough" views on crime
(4) free market competition is a good thing that produces wealth (but that most "free" markets aren't really free, and are the product of lobbying and protected monopolies)
(5) students are utterly coddled and should work much harder and take proper majors not BS ones
(6) affirmative action is bad (though I accept that there's a particularly difficult history with African Americans specifically and so I'm possibly open to argument here)
I don't think Hillary's particularly clean as a politician, but I find Trump quite beyond the pale to be honest. If there's another past politician I'd compare him to, it would be Silvio Berlusconi of Italy. He appears to be motivated by wealth and personal gain and he seems to be unwilling to disentangle his business from his soon-to-be position. I guess we will soon find out if he's really in it to serve his country.
One Trump policy that I agreed with was his point that lobbyists have bought Washington and they should be swiftly kicked out. But he seems to be surrounding himself with rich billionaires who have personally benefited from the fruits of lobbying? I mean the oil and gas lobby is indeed a lobby, and so is the national rifle association.
Which of Trump's policies (say, name 5?) did you like?