6 out of 10 voters view Democrats negatively: WSJ poll
The Democratic Party has been seen negatively by 63 percent of American voters – the lowest classification of the party in more than 30 years of Wall Street Journal polls – according to a new poll from the newspaper.
The poll found that although voters refused President Trump’s dealings with a variety of issues, they generally said that they trust the Republicans more than Democrats to care for these issues in Congress.
On the customs tariff, for example, the voters rejected Trump’s policies by 17 percentage points, but they trust the Republican lawmakers more than Democrats on this issue with seven points.
Only 8 percent of voters who saw Democrats “very positively” in the survey. President Trump himself obtained a 46 percent approval rating.
The Wall Street Journal poll followed a CNN poll on Thursday, which was found that only 28 percent of the voters saw Democrats positively.
Democrats face that the distress is widely for voters and perceptions that the party does not exceed 2026, as the main parts of the party’s national infrastructure were threatened through fighting.
However, they seek to take advantage of Trump’s most popular policies.
They hope that the “large and beautiful draft law” of the Republican Party will be, with tax cuts in favor of the wealthy, as well as the major discounts in Medicaid and other social services, swearing by voters. A minor majority – 52 percent – of the voters in a reconnaissance on Friday rejected the draft law.
The ongoing controversy over the late sexual crimes of Jeffrey Epstein – a flash point for voters in Maga who sought to exploit Democrats – may also play as members of Congress tend to August holidays.
The council poll found that the voters were very skeptical that the Ministry of Justice had achieved the case, as 65 percent of Democrats and 30 percent of Republicans said that they had “no confidence” in the administration’s review.
The poll of 1500 registered voters were held between July 16 and July 20 by an error margin of 2.5 percentage points. It was conducted by the Democratic Reconciliation poll, John Anzelon, and the strategy of the Republican Party, Tony Fabrizio.