Pro-Hamas Students at CA State Polytechnic University Went January 6 With Police
If Columbia University's President Considers This a Form of Protesting, The Terror Camp...
Former Rolling Stone Editor's Biting Attack on the NYT's 'Adults' Piece About Speaker...
Here's How Sarah Huckabee Sanders Is Welcoming Education Secretary Miguel Cardona to Arkan...
Judge Clashes With Trump Attorney at Gag Order Hearing
Democrats Are Going to Get Someone Killed and They’re Perfectly Fine With It
Postcards From the Edge of Cannibalism
Harvard Takes Action Against Pro-Hamas Student Group
Trump Comes to Johnson's Defense
Head of Israel's Military Intelligence Resigns Over 10/7
RFK Jr. Just Got on the Ballot in a Key Swing State...and Dems...
Some of the Illegal Aliens DeSantis Sent to Martha’s Vineyard Will Be Permitted...
Biden’s ‘Ghost Gun’ Crackdowns Head to the Supreme Court
NBC's New 2024 Poll Is Mostly Good News for Trump, But...
Ted Cruz Insists University Professors Turning 'Blind Eye' to Antisemitism 'Should Resign...
Tipsheet

Gallup Poll: Roughly 4 in 10 Americans Self-Identify as…Independents?

Are Americans so increasingly tired of partisan politics that they’re eschewing labels and declaring themselves independents? Surely that seems to be the case. According to a new Gallup poll, 42 percent of Americans do not identify with either (major) political party:

Advertisement

 photo gallupindependentsgraph_zpsb2339c48.png

As you can readily see, the Republican Party is somewhat struggling to retain their rolls. And what’s more, the percentage of Americans who self-identify as Republicans hasn’t been this low since 1983:

Americans' increasing shift to independent status has come more at the expense of the Republican Party than the Democratic Party. Republican identification peaked at 34% in 2004, the year George W. Bush won a second term in office. Since then, it has fallen nine percentage points, with most of that decline coming during Bush's troubled second term. When he left office, Republican identification was down to 28%. It has declined or stagnated since then, improving only slightly to 29% in 2010, the year Republicans "shellacked" Democrats in the midterm elections.

That’s right around the time “Bush fatigue” settled in -- that is, when the war in Iraq looked hopeless and the 2008 financial meltdown was right around the corner. But while Republican rolls are seemingly dwindling at alarming rates, Democrats aren’t faring much better. Since 2008, Democratic identification has fallen five percentage points in five years -- to 31 percent. No doubt this is partially attributed to the president’s waning popularity.

Advertisement

Here's Gallup summarizing the results:

The rise in political independence is likely an outgrowth of Americans' record or near-record negative views of the two major U.S. parties, of Congress, and their low level of trust in government more generally.

Parting question: If more Americans than ever are checking the ‘no labels’ box, what kind of Republican candidates are expected to win national elections in the future? Rigid ideologues viewed as uncompromising, or centrist RINOS with more nuanced positions?

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement