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Country pessimistic about both parties, see democracy being tested, new poll finds

Country pessimistic about both parties, see democracy being tested, new poll finds

USA Today2 days ago

Country pessimistic about both parties, see democracy being tested, new poll finds
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Over 80% of Americans said that democracy is at least being tested while neither party is seen as being able to get things done in a CNN poll released June 1.
The poll found that 49% of respondents believe that American democracy is under attack and 36% believe that American democracy is being tested.
Respondents held a dim view of both parties, even as 58% said that the government should do more to solve problems – a record high in over 30 years of the network's polling.
The network reported that respondents were split on if either party represented the middle class, with a third saying neither did.
Republicans saw a seven-point advantage over Democrats on handling the economy, the narrowest lead on the issue in the polling since 2022 and lost over half of their advantage on immigration, falling from a 14-point lead in November 2023 to a six-point lead in the new poll.
The poll was conducted by SSRS online or by phone from May 5-26 among 2,539 adults across the country using a combination of online and telephone interviews.
Here's what else the poll found.
Neither party seen as having strong leadership, able to get things done
When asked if a party had strong leaders, 40% of respondents agreed with that description for Republicans and only 36% said that they could get things done. The survey was even more pessimistic for Democrats, as only 16% of respondents said they had strong leaders and 19% said they could get things done.
The response of neither won both questions with 43% and 44% respectively, despite 81% of respondents saying they saw "important differences" between the two parties.
The network reported that the gap in favorability was fueled by partisan views with Republican-aligned respondents 50 points likelier than Democratic-aligned respondents to say that their party has strong leaders while the question of which party could get things done elicited a 36-point difference between partisans.
Independents were particularly pessimistic about the parties, with 76% saying that neither party had strong leadership nor could get things done.
Trump approval rating: Recent polls mostly steady through late May
Diversity seen as positive by wide majority
Just under three-quarters of respondents said that growing racial diversity does "more to enrich than threaten American culture."
Objection to that view, held by 27% of respondents, was concentrated among Republican-aligned men with 45% of Republicans and Republican-leaning independents calling diversity a threat – a 25% jump from 2019, according to the network.
Democrats held an eight-point advantage on LGTBQ issues in the poll and a seven-point margin on race issues.
Respondents saying that abortion should be legal in all circumstances hit a record high at 36% in the poll. Thirty-five percent of respondents said that abortion should be legal in "a few" circumstances while 15% said that the procedure should be legal in most circumstances.

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