According to their own internal votes, Democrats are in deep and deep trouble.
Politico's Elena Schneider, who revealed the number of Democrats, wrote on Tuesday that the Democratic brand is in the trench.
“The Democratic brand is roughly shaped on the Congressional battlefield,” Schneider said. I wrote it. “Nearly two months after the second Donald Trump administration, the majority of voters in the House district on the battlefield believe that Congressional Democrats are “more focused on helping others” than I do, according to an internal vote conducted by Democrats Group Navigator Research. Among independents, only 27% believe Democrats are focused on helping them, while 55% say they are focused on others. ”
Democrat poller Molly Murphy says in his political work that voters have been somewhat critical of Trump in some spots, but Democrats say they are causing serious damage to fix it with their own brand before they can trust them in the government again. Navigator's Murphy and others, part of the Democratic nonprofit The Hub Project, are expected to present these vote counts to house Democrats in Leesburg, Virginia at a question meeting later this week.
“Democratic brands are not where we need them in terms of understanding the core trust and people's challenges,” Murphy said. “Even though voters are critical of Trump and some of what he is doing, criticism of Trump has not been translated into trust in Democrats. They need to win a trust.”
Other figures in the polls are even worse for Democrats. A majority of 56% of those surveyed said Democrats were not looking for working-class people. Only 42% said they shared values with the Democrats. Just 39% said they were worth Democrats, while just 44% said Democrats respected their work. 39% said Democrats have the right priorities as a party.
The survey was conducted by Impact Research, and voted for 1,500 voters from February 21st to February 25th.
In addition to the broader Democrat branding issues, Democrats' internal voting trust Republicans are more of the battlefield district voters than the Democrats of the economy.
“In a navigator survey of 62 competitive residential areas across the country, voters said they trust Republicans more than Democrats by dealing with the economy at a five-point margin of 46% to 41%,” Schneider wrote. “Voters also trust Republicans more than Democrats with a 7-point margin in their response to inflation. 44% to 37%.”





