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The Democratic Party reaches 35 years of low favorable surveys, according to WSJ

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The president of the National Democratic Committee (DNC), Ken Martin, did not incubate his party’s sugar problems.

“We have a brand problem,” said DNC’s president in a recent digital Fox News interview.

And in what is starting to look like a broken record, the Democratic Party has reached another historic hollow in a national survey last weekend.

Only one third of those questioned in a Wall Street Journal survey said they had a favorable vision of the party, 63% occupying an unfavorable opinion on the Democrats.

What the president of the Democratic Party said to Fox News Digital

DNC 2024 Jumbotron

Democrats have lost control of the White House and Senate and failed in their attempt to reconquer the majority of the room in the 2024 elections. (Fox News / Paul Steinhauser)

This is the most unfavorable note for the party in a Wall Street Journal Survey dating 35 years old.

Although the favorable notes for President Donald Trump (45% -52%) and the Republican Party (43% -54%) in the survey were nothing to boast, they were not as deeply underwater as the favorability of Democrats.

“The Democratic brand is so bad that it does not have the credibility of being a Trump’s critic or the republican party,” said the longtime democratic sounder, John Anzalone, who heads the Wall Street Journal survey with the veteran of republican polls Tony Fabrizio.

Position of the survey: the figures of the Democratic Party sink to new stockings

The Wall Street Journal Survey, which was led from July 16 to 20, is the last this month to indicate the dive in the poll of the Democratic Party.

Only 28% of Americans saw the party favorably, according to a CNN survey carried out on July 10 to 13. This is the lowest note for Democrats in all the history of the CNN survey, dating back over 30 years.

And only 19% of voters interviewed in a Quinnipiac University The national survey on the field from July 10 to 14 gave the Democrats at Congress a boost on the way in which they take care of their functions, with 72% disapproval.

Schumer, on the left, next to Jeffries

The leader of the Senate minorities, Charles Schumer, Dn.y., and the minority head of the Hakeem Jeffries room, Dn.y., are expressed during a press conference at the American Capitol on June 11, 2025, in Washington, DC (Kevin Dietsch)

It is a hollow of all time since the Quinnipiac university began to ask questions of approval of the congress in their surveys 16 years ago.

The Democratic Party has been in the political desert since last year’s elections. Not only has the party lost control of the White House and Senate and did not recognize the majority of the room, but also The Republicans have made gains Among black, Hispanic and younger voters, all traditional members of the Democratic Party base.

Since Trump’s return to power at the start of this year, an increasingly energetic democrat base has urged party leaders to take a stronger position by postponing the president’s second term and controversial program. Their anger is addressed not only to the Republicans, but to the Democrats, they do not feel vocal enough in their opposition to Trump.

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This fueled a dive into the favorable notes of the Democratic Party, which struck historical stockings in several surveys this year.

“When you touch Rock Bottom, there is only one direction to go, and that’s in place, and that’s what we do,” said Martin last week in his digital interview Fox News.

Martin said that “people have joined this idea that Donald Trump and Republicans best represent their interests for the future”.

And this is reflected in the survey of the Wall Street Journal. Even if Trump’s overall approval ratings and its figures specifically on the way it manages the economy is in negative territory, the survey indicates that voters always trust the Republicans on Democrats on the 10 -point economy.

But there is a silver lining in the poll for Democrats.

By a margin of 46% to 43%, the voters interviewed in the survey declared that they would support a democrat for the Congress to a Republican.

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Democrats aim to win back the majority of the room and the Senate in the mid-term elections next year.

In the Wall Street Journal survey eight years ago, the Democrats have had an advantage of eight points, a year ahead of a blue wave that brought the party to power when they took the majority of the 2018 mid-term room during the first Trump administration.

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