Home UK News Why is the Democratic Party’s favorability rating so low?

Why is the Democratic Party’s favorability rating so low?

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The Democratic Party is in trouble. A new poll shows a record share of voters view the party unfavorably, leaving party leaders scrambling to figure out how to broaden their brand’s appeal.

Nearly two-thirds of Americans have an “unfavorable view” of Democrats, said The Wall Street Journal, which commissioned the poll. That is the “highest share” of negative ratings for a political party in the paper’s surveys going all the way back to 1990. Democrats hoping for a “voter backlash against the president” ahead of next year’s midterms elections have a long way to go to persuade the public “they can do a better job” than the GOP. Republicans do not come off well, either — the poll shows the public dislikes President Donald Trump’s “handling of the economy, inflation, tariffs and foreign policy.” But Democrats “don’t have the credibility to be a critic of Trump” or the GOP, said Democratic pollster John Anzalone.

‘Hit rock bottom’

Democrats have “hit rock bottom,” Nick Catoggio said at The Dispatch. Despite all the terrible events that have happened in America since 1990, “at no point” have voters disliked a party as much as they do Democrats at this moment. It is possible that voters will “come around.” But the WSJ poll shows that Republicans get higher marks than Democrats even on “issues on which Trump receives bad marks.” That looks like a “catastrophic decline in confidence in the left’s basic ability to govern.”

Democrats “express much less warmth” toward their own leaders than Republicans, Philip Bump said on his website. It is no coincidence that the “most vibrant expressions of opposition” to Trump come from figures like Sen. Bernie Sanders and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez who “sit at a distance from the party.” If party leadership continues to stumble, Democratic candidates should “run against or apart from the party as much as possible.”

“These are some tough numbers for Democrats,” G. Elliott Morris said at Strength in Numbers. There is a bright spot: The same WSJ poll also shows that Democrats have a three-point advantage in the “generic congressional ballot,” which measures which party voters would want to represent them if the election were held today. That seemingly slim lead “would be large enough for the Democrats to win somewhere around 230-235 seats” in the House.

‘Nobody’s voting on anything’

There is a “silver lining” for Democrats, Jim Geraghty said at The Washington Post. “If you’re going to be unpopular, do it when almost nobody’s voting on anything.” There are a “handful” of special elections for the House of Representatives this year, but there is still more than a year to go before the 2026 midterm elections. The WSJ poll may be “ominous,” but at the moment “it doesn’t count for anything.”

“Democrats don’t need to be popular,” Ed Kilgore said at New York. Right now, the party’s candidates are favored to win “most of the competitive off-year races in 2025, including the New Jersey and Virginia governorships.” If Democrats win a few elections, “that will take care of most of their morale problems.”

Voters do not like Republican policies. They like Democrats even less.