Support for Republicans Is Tanking. But Why Are Democrats Hated Just as Much?
Trump's second term is wrecking the Grand Old Party—and Democrats' refusal to own up to Biden's failure is killing the party of Jefferson and Obama.
Just a few weeks before Donald Trump celebrated the start of the second year of his—potentially—last term as president, Gallup released a truly stunning poll about how Americans self-identify in political terms. When asked, "As of today, do you consider yourself a Republican, a Democrat or an independent?" 45 percent chose the latter—a historic high for that self-evidently attractive designation. (Disclosure: I coauthored a book called The Declaration of Independents.) Meanwhile, a paltry 27 percent of respondents confessed they were either a Republican or a Democrat. That's very close to the all-time low for Republicans and represents the absolute nadir, so far, for Democrats.

There's a lot to suss through in these results. I'll come back to what it might mean to be an independent later, but first let's focus on Republican and Democrat, two labels that predate the Civil War. Like a lot of things that old, they aren't doing so hot.
The plummeting in Republican identification surprises nobody outside of the president's Cabinet meetings, where his top officials routinely veer into parodies of North Korean politics by showering him with excessive praise and delusional reports on the effectiveness of his failing signature policies.
Reason's Brian Doherty exhaustively catalogued Trump's first year back in power as a specifically "libertarian nightmare," with the attacks on free speech, the imperial adventures, the stupid and self-defeating tariffs, the brazen family corruption, the unrestrained spending, and the murderous immigration enforcement actions. But of course, it's not just libertarians who are put out by Trump's return to power. At this point, everybody is sick of The Donald and they are taking it out on the party he leads. And that was happening even before Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents shot and killed two protesters in Minneapolis in late January and administration officials started attacking the Second Amendment, a move that "widens a split between Trump and gun rights groups," one of the GOP's most loyal contingents.
In a deeply polarized America, the president is doing the hard work of bringing a supermajority together in opposition to him and his party. Nate Silver notes that as of Valentine's Day, there was little love for Trump. His approval rating was just 40.5 percent, meaning that he was even less popular than Joe Biden at the same point in his presidency and Trump himself the first time around. As Trump officials and nominees talk up Scots-Irish whiteness as the sine qua non of American identity, it's not surprising that Latino votes are flowing back to the Democrats. "Just one year after Trump soared to victory with 48 percent of the Latino vote nationally," reported Politico after last fall's elections, Hispanics in places such as New Jersey, Virginia, and California "boomeranged back to Democrats…signaling the fraying of his coalition less than one year into his second term."
On the economic front, Trump's signature moves have all backfired and the failure is exacerbated by ideologically flexible defenders such as his chief economic adviser Kevin Hassett, whose long career promoting free trade at places such as the American Enterprise Institute ended when he joined the administration (most recently, Hassett called for researchers at the New York Federal Reserve to be "disciplined" for publishing research showing that domestic consumers shoulder 90 percent of the burden of tariffs). Tariffs have failed to bring back manufacturing jobs (indeed, by last December, almost 100,000 factory jobs had gone missing) or improve the admittedly useless metric of trade deficits. As Reason's Jack Nicastro wrote last year, the country's trade deficit grew since "Liberation Day," even as China exported more in 2025 than in 2024. At long last, America is tired of so much winning.
But if it's easy to make sense of why Republican self-identification is cratering, how to explain that the Democrats are not just doing badly, but historically badly—indeed, as badly as Republicans? Note that what Gallup shows is not a recent crash but a long, barely uninterrupted slide since 2009, when former President Barack Obama's honeymoon ended despite (or maybe because of) his stunningly expansive yet spectacularly ineffective stimulus spending during the Great Recession and the interminable and unprincipled wrangling within his own party to drag the Affordable Care Act over the legislative finish line (accomplished by giving away more and more "sweeteners" to Democratic holdouts). While Obama exited the White House far more popular than George W. Bush had, his lies about ubiquitous government spying on people—revealed by Edward Snowden—turned his boasts about running "the most transparent administration in history" into a joke. On his watch, the Democrats lost unified control of the House and Senate, the ultimate sign of voters being turned off by a particular president and his party (as Trump himself would learn in the 2018 midterms when his GOP coughed up the House).
Although Hillary Clinton deserves virtually all of the blame for the outcome of the 2016 presidential election—she ran a truly terrible campaign that failed to motivate Democratic loyalists along with undecided voters, all while blaming a fawning media for self-generated scandals—that the contest was close enough for Trump to win at all is also a testament to Obama's time in office and his party's inability to connect with voters.
Per Gallup, during Trump's first term, Democratic self-identification stabilized for a few years around 30 percent before dropping again during Biden's presidency. Like Trump in his first term, Biden enjoyed full party control of Congress during his first two years, a situation that has proven to be a curse to recent presidents. As political scientist Morris Fiorina has shown in books such as Unstable Majorities, when a single party enjoys full control of the federal government, they enact policies that reflect the ideological extremes of their party and alienate centrist voters, leading to what he calls "electoral chaos," meaning the party in power ends up losing control of all or part of the government in subsequent elections. Historically, there have been long periods of unified control of the government, but since the start of the 21st century, neither major party has been able to assert control for very long. In 2006, Bush and the Republicans lost control of the House and the Senate. After winning in a landslide in 2008, Obama and the Democrats lost control of the House in 2010 and then the Senate in 2014. In 2018, the Republicans under Trump lost the House. In 2022, under Biden, the Democrats lost the House before losing the presidency and both houses of Congress in 2024. It's important to understand that these flips happen precisely because a single party controls the government and is able to muscle through, however narrowly, an agenda that repulses most voters.
The bizarre circumstances of the 2024 election help explain why Democratic self-identification has reached a historic low. For understandable reasons, the Democratic Party doesn't want to dwell on how Biden, or his caretakers, only threw in the towel after his disastrous showing in his June 2024 debate with Trump. Forget all the gaslighting by the people around him and a pliant, you-gotta-believe media. Nothing prepared the country for the spectacle of Biden whispering hoarsely and going off on weird tangents about topics such as incest. "Here's the deal," he said while answering a question about abortion rights. "There's a lot of young women being raped by their in-laws, by their spouses, brothers and sisters, it's just ridiculous and they can do nothing about, they try to arrest them when they cross state lines." At another point, he announced, "We finally beat Medicare," which left even his most ardent supporters flummoxed as to the meaning. The chaos of the three weeks it took him to formally drop out, which he did via X rather than in a live press event, only cemented the idea that we were witnessing a "national pants-shitting moment" of truly historic proportions.
If the irrefutable reality of a deeply cognitively impaired president wasn't bad enough, the speedy coronation of widely disliked Vice President Kamala Harris without any sort of mini-primary or public selection system only added to the problems. Despite a strong convention and debate performance against Trump, Harris began losing steam as she made the election about Trump rather than outlining any sort of positive program that would improve our lives after four years of Biden, whom she also failed to separate herself from. Ultimately, reported the BBC, "she lost 13 points with Latino voters, two points with black voters, and six points with voters under 30." And she did worse with women than Biden did, pulling just 54 percent of their votes to his 57 percent. In her slim volume about the election published last fall, 107 Days, she expresses "apparent candor" but also fails to fully come clean about the dysfunction that ultimately made her a presidential candidate without ever once winning a primary.
Over Trump's first year in office, Democratic leadership has, at least until recently, mostly stayed quiet rather than noisily fight the Republican agenda. Such an approach might be channeling Sun Tzu's maxim to "never interrupt your opponent while he is in the middle of making a mistake," and all signs point to large gains by the Democrats in the midterms, especially if they end up being a referendum on Trump. But it is hard to see how the Democratic Party will staunch the long, slow bleed it's suffered since the early Obama years. In early polling about preferred presidential candidates, a large plurality (39 percent) chooses Harris, a result that can hardly inspire confidence, even as it mostly reflects name recognition more than anything else.
And to the extent that there is anything resembling a pulse in the Democratic Party, it belongs to younger, hard-left figures such as New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani, whose fan bases are as vocal as they are small in the overall scheme of things. Gallup reports that nearly six out of 10 Democrats identify as "liberal/very liberal" even as 74 percent of independents identify as moderate or conservative/very conservative. It seems unlikely that moving in the direction of the Democratic Socialists of America, which counts both AOC and Mamdani among its ranks, will increase self-identification for Democrats.
It is obvious that whichever party does better with independents will triumph both in the midterms and the 2028 elections. Most of the record-high 45 percent of self-identified independents lean to one party or the other, but a full 10 percent are nonleaners, more than enough to win virtually any election at any level. Exactly what or who those independents will vote for is unclear. In The Declaration of Independents, Matt Welch and I posited that just as voters were unbundling how they consumed media by dropping cable packages larded with unwanted and unwatched offerings, so too were voters unbundling their politics by deserting strong identification with two of the most-hated brands in America. When the paperback edition of our book came out in 2012, 28 percent of Americans called themselves Republicans, 31 percent called themselves Democrats, and 40 percent called themselves independent.

Fourteen years later, only one of those groups is growing, and for reasons that a different Gallup poll illuminates: A record high number of us believe that the federal government has too much power. In the 2024 presidential race, whatever else you can say about Trump and Harris, they constantly outdid one another in explaining exactly how they were going to take over more and more parts of your life. Ironically, the first party that takes Americans' views on federal government power seriously and lets people get on with their lives might just end up staying in office longer than a few years.
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Disclosure: I coauthored a book called The Declaration of Independents.
Is that a disclosure or a plug?
It's a confession, a guilty confession, a humble confession.
Republicans are hated because they are lying fascist fucks. Ds are hated because they are spineless chicken shits.
And both are hated for being cowardly collectivist looters--lacking the grit to even rob their victims face-to-face!
Fuck off you vapid raving faggot.
Lol. No, molly. D’s are hated because they are unhinged grievance pimps. This approach is losing its effectiveness, as it eventually must.
Get ready for 8 years of president Vance. Haha.
Yep, and R's and D's are hated for being warmongering overspenders.
You have no idea what fascism is, you ignorant leftist useful idiot.
Maybe libertarians should get serious about working within and influencing one or both of the existing two parties and stop pissing in the wind, and getting 1-2% at best, with their Libertarian Party? The LP, at 50+ years, has failed. Stop spending time and resources trying to be a big man in a small pond of about 6,000 members. Nolan's dream did not come true. There was little recognition afforded the LP on the soapbox and "the word" never got out (or was rejected solidly and repeatedly).
So should we help Christian prohibition Nazis kill jews & brown people and bring Crashes or pitch in with CHICOMS and Stalinists to ban electricity and take-home pay? Which? Third parties once had guts and math enough to twice amend the Constitution with 2% spoiler vote clout. It leveraged the Kleptocracy looters into adopting their planks. Search "The Case For Voting Libertarian" online since FEB2007. Or screech "surrender", whichever fits your integrity.
Damn i must have missed a whole bunch of news articles about Christian nazis murdering jews and borwn people.
Whatever it takes. Maybe both.
That's good, but the activists have to realize it takes a different kind of work, different kind of organizing, from having a pre-made political party. You can't just take LPers and transplant them into a larger party for effect; most of them would be just as ineffective or counterproductive as they've been in LP.
Hey Nick, here’s some cheer for yams the Reason staff…….
https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2026/02/kansas-gop-overrides-dem-gov-laura-kellys-veto/
FTA:
Kansas Republicans delivered a decisive victory for women’s privacy and biological truth on February 18, 2026, when the House joined the Senate in overriding Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly’s veto of House Substitute for Senate Bill 244.
The Republican-led Senate overrode Kelly’s veto with a 31-9 vote, and the House followed with an 87-37 tally, easily surpassing the two-thirds margin needed to send the bill straight into law.
The move came just days after Gov. Kelly vetoed the bill on February 13, 2026, calling the legislation “poorly drafted” and warning it would have “numerous and significant consequences.”
Might be nice to have added a little about what the bill actually does.
It keeps men in dresses out of women’s bathrooms. Reason reported on this previously.
Thanks, that was nice. Appreciate it.
the party of Jefferson and Obama
Yah, I don't think that's particularly useful or true. If the point was to mention the endpoints, it should have been Biden or Harris, not Obama.
Comparing Jefferson to Obama when Jefferson owned slaves is weird.
Yah, I don't think that's particularly useful or true.
Who cares about useful or true? He's got a shitty book full of equally shitty political takes and revisionist history to sell. Whether someone buys it to see how terrible his ideology is, buys it to see how brilliant and countercultural he thinks he is, or buys it to keep their coffee table from wobbling, it's a sale. Hell, he'll even take absconding with it to the book store's restroom, using the pages to wipe your ass, getting caught, being forced to pay and leaving the book that was used to sully some random person's asshole in the dumpster. That's how edgy and declaratively independent he is.
At this point, Reason is making the NYT look competent.
If it weren't for Trump and Ron Paul's girl-bullying mystical bigots infiltrating and national-socializing the LP, most of that 45% of non-Kleptcracy voters could be Libertarian. After Gary's 4M votes kicked Women's Christian Temperament hippie-baiter and energy-prohibitionist Shrillary out on her butt, Republicans instantly knew they'd be next if they failed to again kill the LP in it's cradle. From 1972 to 1976 LP votes increased 4600%. A similar surge from 2016 to 2020 and the LP'd have gotten more votes than both looter gangs combined.
"45 percent chose the latter"
Hi, it's me - grammar nazi again - but technically "the latter" is the second of two; "the last" would be the third of three.
I didn't know that. Thanks.
Another victim of public education.
I mean the LP collapse was 50% under chase.
Dem collapse is hilariously bad.
But not article worthy I guess.
A little more Physics and less Lit and Nick would notice that the Second Amendment is about a militia able to resist and defeat nuclear attack. Layabouts packing heat so as to rob women's purses and shoot back at cops, not so much. Still, Nixon's GOP violated 2A by treasonously limiting our ABMs to please looter dictatorships. Are the Dems, whose planks more closely resemble the communist manifesto, any better? Unadulterated libertarians favor strong defense, like H.G. Wells predicted in The Time Machine.
Ah yes, the founders created the second amendment with the forethought of stopping nuclear weapons invented 170 years later. LMAO
Trump is loud, purposefully trolls, and is divisive. He's always going to provoke a strong reaction, its just how it is.
Interesting that democrats are so unpopular in the context of being the out of power party right now. May be related to the fact that its a party that is divided into two equally repulsive factions: old establishment dinosaurs that are openly corrupt fucks that are enriching themselves in broad daylight using the govt, and a young, ignorant, borderline retarded class of upcoming young folks that are very far into marxism and identity politics. Both of these factions are repulsive to normies.
The democrats are severely lacking a middle ground. Which is a great representation for them, being that they used to actually represent the middle class / working class, and they now pander to AWFL white women with college degrees, and poor minorities.
Funny enough, they could absolutely win if their message focused on a specific demographic: working class white men. But they are so entrenched in the woke movement, they wont allow it. But if they stopped demonizing white men, and actually put out an olive branch to them and offered to bring them up, they would honestly probably win.
And yet, those will remain the only choices - - - - - - - -
The republicans are mostly incompetent, the democrats mostly evil.
We are caught by a horny dilemma.
"The republicans are mostly incompetent, the democrats mostly evil."
That sounds kinda vague and simplistic. Regrettably, it is also TRUE.
And while I believe the bumbling republicans can become more competent - even in spite their being viciously maligned at every turn - the conniving democrats becoming less evil isn't even on the table. Therefore, I can't see why anyone who has eyes AND can see what is actually going on would not be inclined to despise the democrats at least an order of magnitude more than the republicans. It IS that simple.
From I can't remember who:
"The important things in life are simple; the simple things in life are hard."
Stupid question.
Biden's failure is killing the party of Jefferson and Obama
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Democratic-Republican_Party
The Democratic-Republican Party, known at the time as the Republican Party (also referred to by historians as the Jeffersonian Republican Party),[a] was an American political party founded by Thomas Jefferson and James Madison in the early 1790s.
a: Party members generally referred to it as the Republican Party; although the word Republican is not to be confused with the modern Republican Party founded in the 1850s. To distinguish this party from the current Republican Party, political scientists usually use the term "Democratic-Republican".
The Declaration of Independents.
Given your shit-stupid, revisionist "Jefferson was a Democrat" I'll take a pass on reading your shitty sub-HS intellectual take on Independents.
Maybe it's just a typo and you meant to say "Jackson", who is traditionally and much more widely recognized as the founder of the Democratic Party, but it's easier to believe that you're somewhere between cravenly inept journalist and lying sack of shit.
I stopped reading right there.
Jefferson is my favorite Founding Father and there is no sane reading of any of his work that aligns with modern Democrat Planks. However, knowing Nick's style I suspect he was name-checking the two in a joking manner that didn't quite land.
Biden's failure is killing the Jim Eagle Party.
Today, Americans are about evenly split between the two parties: 46% identify with or lean toward the Republican Party, and 45% identify with or lean toward the Democratic Party. This balance of partisanship is similar to 2024, but the current near-even division marks a shift from the affiliation advantage the Democratic Party enjoyed a few years ago.
https://www.pewresearch.org/politics/fact-sheet/party-affiliation-fact-sheet-npors/
Just remember that while the dead do vote, they never answer surveys.
Isn't this same dunce who was so upset over the deportation of a man who should have never been here due to a conviction in his home country he was running from?
Glad Gutfeld no longer has him on his show.