The Democratic Party's favorable rating is CNN Survey It was released on Sunday.
A survey conducted between March 6 and 9 found that 54% of US adults said they had a disadvantage about the Democrats, while 29% had positive opinions and 16% said they had no opinion.
This represents a shift from early January before Trump took office for the second time, with 48% saying he had a disadvantage about the Democrats, 33% saying he had a positive opinion and 17% saying he had no opinion.
In late October, ahead of the 2024 election, a survey of registered voters found that 51% of 51% of respondents had a disadvantaged Democrat opinion, 39% had a positive opinion, and 10% had no opinion included. The previous year, in October 2023, it was shown that 50% of American adults had a disadvantage about the Democrats, while 37% had positive opinions and 11% had no opinions.
Meanwhile, Republican support ratings have not changed at 36% since January, but the disadvantage ratings rose from 44% in January to 48% in March surveys.
In October 2024, 49% of registered voters had a disadvantage about GOP, while 40% had a positive opinion. In October 2023, 52% of US adults had a disadvantage about GOP, while 35% had positive opinions.
The GOP's record low favor came in September 2017, when 29% had favorable opinions about the Republican Party and 62% had disadvantageous opinions during the start of Trump's first term.
The Democratic Party's sliding favour appears to be driven by the sourness of its members' party and its leadership.
A recent survey shows that 52% of Democrats and democratic independences say that party leaders are moving the party in the wrong direction, while 48% say they are moving the party in the right direction.
In 2017, when Republicans last held the White House and held conference rooms for both Congresses, 52% said they were leading the party in the right direction, while 36% said they were leading the party in the wrong direction.
Democrats and democratic independences also say they want leaders to have different goals than they said in the 2017 survey. Today, 57% say they want Democrats to work to shut down the GOP agenda, while 42% hope the party will work with Republicans. In September 2017, 74% wanted the party to work with the Republicans, while 23% wanted the party to work to stop the GOP agenda.
The survey included 1,206 respondents, with an error of 3.3 percentage points.





