Yes, Democrats Are Even Anti-Nice Meals for Our Troops
CNN Is Striving to Sink Its Entire Credibility Within a Week, and Journos...
What Is Victory in Operation Epic Fury?
The State of American Conservation Is Strong at SCI Convention
Yeah, You Forgot About God
CNN Repeatedly Screws Up on Mamdani and Two Muslims With Bombs
Democrats Side With the Mullahs
Trump Is Right: The Save America Act Is Crucial
TrumpRx Is a Step Toward Making the Pharma Market Finally Work for America
We Don't Have to Live This Way
Michigan Synagogue Attacker Identified
Ex-MA City Official Allegedly Used City Funds for 153 Pounds of Steak Tips,...
Texas Man Sentenced to 7.5 Years in $59.9M Medicare Brace Scheme
Security Guards Hailed As Heroes After Stopping Attack at Michigan Synagogue Housing 140...
Trump DOJ Sues California Over EV Mandate
Tipsheet

NPR Poll Puts Another Nail in Dems' Midterm Coffin

NPR Poll Puts Another Nail in Dems' Midterm Coffin
AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite

Just how doomed are Democrats in November's midterms? It doesn't take a statistician to read the writing on the wall — inflation sitting at 40-year highs, gas reaching an all-time high, a woke Democrat-education complex running amok, and an open border that's triggered drug, humanitarian, and public health crises — and see that the party in power of the executive and legislative branches is in trouble. 

Advertisement

A new poll out from NPR and Marist shows just how bad Democrats are doing and among which groups their support is trailing GOP candidates by double-digits on the generic congressional ballot question that asks "If this year's election for Congress were held today, which party's candidate are you more likely to vote for in your district?"

Notably, the poll found 52 percent of latino voters would vote for a Republican compared to 39 percent who would choose a Democrat. For voters who have children under 18 years old, 60 percent said they'd vote for the GOP candidate while just 32 percent said they'd pick a Democrat. More voters under 45 years old also broke for Republicans (50 percent) over Democrats (40 percent).

Overall, 47 percent of voters surveyed said they'd choose the Republican candidate while 44 percent said they'd vote for the Democrat. More registered Democrat voters said they'd vote for a Republican in the midterms (7 percent) than Republican voters who would vote to send a Democrat to Congress (3 percent). Among independents, 45 percent said they'd opt for the Republican candidate compared to 38 percent who said they'd vote for the Democrat. Ten percent said they're still unsure with a few months left before November's midterms.

Advertisement

Related:

2022 ELECTIONS NPR

When it comes to education level, non-college educated voters were more likely to vote Republican (51 percent) than Democrat (37 percent) while college graduates showed the opposite with 53 percent saying they'd vote for Democrats to 41 percent who'd vote Republican. 

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement