Dems Lagging Compared To 2018

Sept. 30, 2025

Permission to republish original opeds and cartoons granted.

Another Poll Shows Democrats Trailing Republicans In Congressional Ballot Among 2024 Voters, 47.4% To 46.2%, As Shutdown Looms


Another poll is showing the Democrats trailing Republicans in the generic Congressional ballot for 2026 among 2024 voters, this time from the New York Times-Sienna poll taken Sept. 22 to Sept. 27, with 47.4 percent supporting the Republican candidate and 46.2 percent supporting the Democratic candidate with 6.3 percent saying they were undecided or did not know. Emerson College’s generic ballot question showed the same pattern among 2024 voters, taken Aug. 25 to Aug. 26, with 46.4 percent for the Republican candidate to 44.9 percent for the Democratic candidate and 8.6 percent undecided. Besides what must be disappointing numbers once again for Democrats amongst the most likely to vote pool of voters, 2024 preferences for voting are largely holding up. Even with non-voters included in the poll, Democrats only come out ahead of Republicans 47 percent to 45 percent. In 2006, the average of polls had Democrats leading the generic Congressional ballot 52.1 percent to 40.6 percent, an 11.5 percentage point lead although that overstated the outcome a bit, with Democrats winning the House popular vote 52 percent to 44 percent. And in 2018, the average of polls had Democrats ahead, 49.7 percent to 42.4 percent, a 7.3 percentage point lead, and Democrats won with 53.3 percent to 44.9 percent. Whereas, today, in the average of polls, Democrats only lead 46.7 percent to 43.3 percent in the Congressional ballot for 2026, a 3.4 percentage point lead. That is way off pace from where you would expect the opposition party to be headed into the midterms. Meaning, Democrats, who should be in a better position to win off-year elections, may be more vulnerable than usual to an upset. And is it any wonder?


Cartoon: Gov't Held Hostage


Looks like we’re about to find out.


President Trump Should Engage In Irreversible Reductions In Force In Shutdown


Americans for Limited Government Executive Director Robert Romano: "Democrats have nothing that President Donald Trump needs — except maybe for a government shutdown. The debt ceiling, the southern border wall, his economic program, his tax cuts and so forth were already adopted via budget reconciliation in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. The only thing Republicans might be interested in from Congress after a shutdown are significant cuts to the federal workforce, which Democrats are creating a fortuitous window for with their ill-conceived, zero leverage government shutdown strategy to get health care for millions of illegal aliens. President Trump and the secretaries of each department should proceed with irreversible reductions in force during the shutdown. If the federal employees are not essential, then why should they be retained post-shutdown when Democrats finally come to their senses?”


 

Another Poll Shows Democrats Trailing Republicans In Congressional Ballot Among 2024 Voters, 47.4% To 46.2%, As Shutdown Looms


By Robert Romano

Another poll is showing the Democrats trailing Republicans in the generic Congressional ballot for 2026 among 2024 voters, this time from the New York Times-Sienna poll taken Sept. 22 to Sept. 27, with 47.4 percent supporting the Republican candidate and 46.2 percent supporting the Democratic candidate with 6.3 percent saying they were undecided or did not know. 

Emerson College’s generic ballot question showed the same pattern among 2024 voters, taken Aug. 25 to Aug. 26, with 46.4 percent for the Republican candidate to 44.9 percent for the Democratic candidate and 8.6 percent undecided.

Now, presidential elections are higher turnout affairs than Congressional midterms, so if somebody did not vote in the presidential election, they would be less likely to vote in a Congressional midterm. 

Of course, both parties will still be registering new voters during the cycle, although, the White House incumbent party might have even more of an incentive to bring in new blood to offset what should otherwise be Democrats as the opposition party being fired up to vote.

But what we’re seeing at least in this recent polling, besides what must be disappointing numbers once again for Democrats amongst the most likely to vote pool of voters, is that 2024 preferences for voting are largely holding up.

Even with non-voters included in the poll, Democrats only come out ahead of Republicans 47 percent to 45 percent. 

In 2006, the average of polls had Democrats leading the generic Congressional ballot 52.1 percent to 40.6 percent, an 11.5 percentage point lead although that overstated the outcome a bit, with Democrats winning the House popular vote 52 percent to 44 percent.

And in 2018, the average of polls had Democrats ahead, 49.7 percent to 42.4 percent, a 7.3 percentage point lead, and Democrats won with 53.3 percent to 44.9 percent.

Whereas, today, in the average of polls, Democrats only lead 46.7 percent to 43.3 percent in the Congressional ballot for 2026, a 3.4 percentage point lead. That is way off pace from where you would expect the opposition party to be headed into the midterms. 

Meaning, Democrats, who should be in a better position to win off-year elections, may be more vulnerable than usual to an upset. 

And is it any wonder?

Just this month, Congressional Democrats are demanding that taxpayer-funded health care via Medicaid and insurance subsidies for millions of illegal aliens that was finally prohibited in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act be reinstated or else they’ll continue filibuster funding the government. As of this writing, a partial government shutdown looms, where non-excepted employees might be furloughed or laid off completely via reductions in force unless Congress acts. 

Democrats seem to think a government shutdown favors them and that it is a winning issue. We’ll see.

Of all issues, in 2024, besides inflation, Democrats’ failure to address illegal immigration was one of the principal reasons President Donald Trump was reelected. Is that what Democrats really want the American people to be talking about? Oh well.

Now, when opposition to President Trump should be reaching certain heights, Democrats via the government funding fight appear determined to remind voters why they voted for Trump and Republican majorities in the first place, with 2026 hanging in the balance. Stay tuned. 

Robert Romano is the Executive Director of Americans for Limited Government Foundation. 

To view online: https://dailytorch.com/2025/09/another-poll-shows-democrats-trailing-republicans-in-congressional-ballot-among-2024-voters-47-4-to-46-2-as-shutdown-looms/


Cartoon: Gov't Held Hostage

By A.F. Branco


Click here for a higher level resolution.

To view online: https://dailytorch.com/2025/09/cartoon-govt-held-hostage/


President Trump Should Engage In Irreversible Reductions In Force In Shutdown

Sept. 30, 2025, Fairfax, Va.—Americans for Limited Government Executive Director Robert Romano today issued the following statement urging President Donald Trump to proceed with irreversible reductions in force as soon as the partial government shutdown begins at midnight:

"Democrats have nothing that President Donald Trump needs — except maybe for a government shutdown. The debt ceiling, the southern border wall, his economic program, his tax cuts and so forth were already adopted via budget reconciliation in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. The only thing Republicans might be interested in from Congress after a shutdown are significant cuts to the federal workforce, which Democrats are creating a fortuitous window for with their ill-conceived, zero leverage government shutdown strategy to get health care for millions of illegal aliens. President Trump and the secretaries of each department should proceed with irreversible reductions in force during the shutdown. If the federal employees are not essential, then why should they be retained post-shutdown when Democrats finally come to their senses?”

To view online: https://getliberty.org/2025/09/president-trump-should-engage-in-reductions-in-force-immediately-with-no-turnback/