| By Brent Buchanan (CEO of Cygnal) Seventy-six percent of Americans say they’re being careful with money, just getting by, or struggling to make ends meet. Our Cygnal National Voter Trends (NVT) surveys from February and March tell a story the cable news panels keep getting wrong or refuse to cover entirely. The generic ballot sits at D+4. That is closer than 2018 was at this stage, when most public polls had Democrats up seven to 13 points. But a 55 percent wrong-track number means the party holding the House gavel is playing defense, whether the topline ballot looks manageable or not. Where Republicans Keep Walking into the Wall The GOP’s biggest trap right now is the corporate problem. Seventy-nine percent of voters distrust corporations. Eighty-seven percent say companies are mainly looking out for their own profits. And here’s the part that proves the populist revolution is not partisan: even among strong Republicans, 77 percent say corporations are profit-driven. Running on deregulation when your own base thinks companies are screwing them is a messaging disaster. Pair that with the 32 percent who say Republicans are out of touch with everyday Americans, and you see why the suburban erosion keeps getting worse. In our data, college-educated voters swung from D+11 to D+21 in a single month. The Sweet Spot Is Sitting Right There But the data also shows exactly where the opening is. When we reframed the generic ballot as Democrats opposing cuts, the D+4 ballot turned into a dead tie. Four points moved on framing alone. The SAVE Act polled at 67 percent support among voters who haven’t decided which party they’ll vote for in 2026. Financial pain is real, immigration enforcement is popular, and 40 percent of voters say Democrats are mostly focused on opposing Trump rather than offering solutions. Only 11 percent say Democrats have a clear, compelling vision. That’s a party with a brand problem. Two Different Emotional Playbooks MAGA voters and swing voters respond to completely different triggers, and campaigns that blur the lines between them lose both. For the base, its threat and strength. Seventy-six percent of strong Republicans are extremely or very concerned about Iran’s nuclear program. Ninety-three percent are confident in military readiness. Ninety-one percent strongly support the SAVE Act. These voters want to hear that someone is fighting. The emotional register is protection and resolve. Swing voters run on a different frequency. Independents who distrust corporations at 86 percent, who say they’re just getting by financially, who split evenly on military action against Iran but support proof-of-citizenship requirements by 13 points. Their emotional register is “who actually sees my life.” Not ideology. The candidate who sounds like they’ve been inside a grocery store in the last six months wins these voters. What This Means for November The party that talks about corporate accountability, financial reality, and common sense as a package wins the middle. The party that talks about deregulation and abstract economic indicators loses it. Brent Buchanan is CEO of Cygnal, the leading center-right polling firm, and author of “America’s Emotional Divide: Navigating the Powerful Decision-Making Forces Impacting Politics, Policies & Personal Choices.” |
Designing for the Voter
By Rachel Mecham (Senior Graphic Designer) Every graphic design student enters college with dreams about how their work will one day impact the world. Few imagine that work might one day shape how voters understand a political campaign. Some envision themselves at a...