Polling
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
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
Voter confidence in the federal government slips to 24%, and the few believers cluster among the politically obsessed.
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
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
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
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
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
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.
After Iran, the Wallet
Rasmussen's latest finds the Economy reclaiming voters' top issue spot for the second week running, and the GOP's traditional advantage on it is gone.