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America REJECTS Democrats: Favorability Plunges to Historic Low

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The American people are waking up, seeing through the haze of promises peddled by a Democratic Party that has long cloaked itself in the rhetoric of progress but delivered a legacy of division, economic turmoil, and eroded sovereignty.

From the ashes of segregationist whispers to the shadows of socialist policies, the Democrats’ grip on the public’s trust is slipping fast.

Cold, hard numbers of a fed-up electorate show the Democrat political machine unraveling as the party’s favorability craters to historic lows.

A new Gallup survey, released this week, reveals the Democratic Party’s favorability rating has plummeted to 34 percent, the lowest in the poll’s history since tracking began in 1992.

This marks a steep decline from the high 40s and 60 percent range the party garnered through the 1990s and early 2000s, with a notable slide beginning in the mid-2010s and accelerating into the early 2020s.

A parallel CNBC All-America Economic Survey, conducted from July 29 to August 3, 2025, paints an even bleaker picture, pegging the Democrats’ net favorability at a staggering -32, with a 24 percent positive rating dwarfed by a 56 percent negative one.

The survey underscores "the lowest rating for either party going back to at least 1996,” CNBC reports, highlighting the "near three-decade low."

The numbers reflect a party in freefall, grappling with the fallout of the 2024 election, where former President Donald Trump defeated then-Vice President Kamala Harris.

Polls show Democrats struggling with key demographics—Hispanic men, working-class voters, and independents—while congressional Democrats hit a record-low 19 percent approval rating in a July Quinnipiac University survey.

The Associated Press-NORC poll from the same month found over one in three Democrats calling their own party "weak" and "ineffective" in countering Trump’s administration.

A Unite the Country super PAC survey, reported by The Hill, confirmed support among Hispanic men and working-class voters in battleground states dipping below 35 percent.

On policy, the Democrats are losing ground. Quinnipiac data shows Republicans outperforming them on inflation, immigration, and foreign policy.

The CNBC survey underscores public discontent with Trump’s handling of tariffs, taxes, and federal spending, yet his approval rating stands at 46 percent, compared to a 51 percent disapproval.

As Republican pollster Micah Roberts, partner with Public Opinion Strategies, observed, "Trump’s approval is stable, but his individual ratings are down on issue after issue, except for tariffs. Economic optimism is higher, but there’s been no relief in this data from inflation."

The Democrats’ woes are compounded by internal fractures.

"The CNBC Survey’s finding that Democratic favorability has hit a new low, its lowest in nearly three decades, likely reflecting frustration over the 2024 election loss, perceived economic failures under Biden, and internal party division," Political analyst Craig Agranoff told Newsweek.

He added, "To recover, Democrats need to unify around policies addressing key issues like housing and jobs, invest in grassroots organizing, and elevate new leadership to articulate a compelling vision beyond opposition to Trump."

As the 2026 midterms loom, the stakes are high.

The Gallup and CNBC data signal a long-term erosion of the Democratic Party’s image, with voters increasingly skeptical of its ability to address pressing issues like housing, jobs, and economic stability.

The party’s path forward hinges on its ability to redefine its platform and reconnect with a disillusioned base while appealing to independents who hold the balance of power.

And so, America stands at a crossroads. The Democratic Party, once a beacon for some, now teeters on the edge of irrelevance, its favorability in tatters, its leadership adrift. The people have spoken, and their message is clear: no more race-baiting, no open borders, no more inflation, no more drag queen story times and LGBTQ+ agenda forced on our children, no more empty promises.

As the midterms approach, the Democrats face a reckoning. Will they listen, or will they double down on the policies dragging this nation into chaos? The clock is ticking, and the American people are watching.

Alicia Powe

Alicia is an investigative journalist and breaking news reporter with RiftTV. Alicia's work is featured on outlets including The Gateway Pundit, Project Veritas, Townhall and Media Research Center.

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