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Napolitan News Service

The Squeeze Nobody Voted For
THE PULSE

The Squeeze Nobody Voted For

A new Napolitan survey finds 64% of voters say they are spending more than a year ago. The squeeze crosses party lines, and Democrats now lead on the economy.

One Bill From Trouble
THE PULSE

One Bill From Trouble

A plurality of voters say the country is already in a recession. Beneath the argument over the label, the survey finds a nation split between those with a cushion and those without one.

The People Who Still Trust Washington
THE PULSE

The People Who Still Trust Washington

Voter confidence in the federal government slips to 24%, and the few believers cluster among the politically obsessed.

The Compact Nobody Expects to Be Honored
THE PULSE

The Compact Nobody Expects to Be Honored

A new Napolitan survey finds only 35% favor the National Popular Vote Compact, and even its sympathizers expect blue states would break the pledge the moment it cost them the White House.

American Pride at a Three-Year Low
THE PULSE

American Pride at a Three-Year Low

Pride in country is down nineteen points from its 2024 peak. Among Democrats and AOC-aligned voters, the floor is dropping faster.

Capital Is Not a Hostage
THE PULSE

Capital Is Not a Hostage

A new Napolitan poll finds bipartisan majorities endorse a corporation's right to walk away. The voters have ratified federalism.

The Censor Frightens More Than the Lie
THE PULSE

The Censor Frightens More Than the Lie

Sixty-three percent of voters worry more about federal information control than about disinformation. The gap has widened since January, and the bipartisan consensus against censorship has held for half a decade.

The Slow Bleed
THE PULSE

The Slow Bleed

Republicans held a party ID lead every month from November 2024 through December 2025. Four months later, the lead is a deficit, and the leaners are gone.

The Country Catches Up to Callais
THE PULSE

The Country Catches Up to Callais

A new Napolitan survey finds voters reject race-based congressional maps by 45 to 33, with 64% favoring geographic lines. The Court was not the first to arrive at this conclusion.

America, Evil Empire
THE PULSE

America, Evil Empire

A plurality of Democrats now calls America a force for evil. The new Rasmussen survey on the United Nations is, in truth, a measurement of civic confidence at home.

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