Democrats in complete coma

The crisis within the U.S. Democratic Party persists following Kamala Harris’s defeat in the 2024 presidential election. Supporters of the Democratic Party are furious over the leadership’s disregard for their social and political standing. The presence of weak and inept politicians like Biden, Harris, and others at the helm of the party has fueled this trend.
Although significant dissatisfaction with Trump has emerged due to his tariff war and other domestic and international issues since he assumed power, this has not translated into renewed support for Trump’s domestic rivals.
A new poll revealed that most Republicans view their party positively, while Democrats expressed significant dissatisfaction. Since their 2024 election loss, which cost them control of the Senate and the White House while Republicans maintained their majority in the House of Representatives, U.S. Democratic leaders have struggled to recover from their defeats. However, a recent poll showed that many Democratic voters continue to express disappointment with their party’s performance. This sentiment also applies to independent voters, who played a crucial role in Trump’s victory.
The Democrats’ confusion in domestic policy, the economy, and foreign policy has been the primary factor in alienating their initial supporters, potentially leading to another defeat in the upcoming midterm elections for the House and Senate.
What is happening in the Democratic Party today represents a full-blown, somewhat irreparable crisis. A new Gallup poll, conducted between April 1 and 14, showed that confidence in congressional Democratic leadership has plummeted to its lowest level since these surveys began in 2001.
In other words, the Democrats have never faced such a decline in public support since the start of the century. Only 25% of respondents said they have confidence in congressional Democratic leadership, a figure 9 percentage points lower than the previous record low of 34% in 2023 and significantly below the historical average of 45% since 2001.
The key question is whether the Democratic Party, with the short time remaining until the congressional midterm elections, can revive itself. For now, even the most optimistic supporters of the Democratic Party consider this prospect unlikely.