How was the talk between the president and the Twitter owner? Have y'all done forgot about it already?
No one knows.What are you typing about?
If you're looking for the light out of this political purgatory, you should look to the PNM of Trinidad and sometimes Tobago. If you want to know what autonomous governance looks like on the ground compared to the national electorate, look to the numerous political parties pumped out of the soil in Tobago. Progressivism can't work because the national electorate understands capitalism better than you suspect. The democratic party needs to appeal to its base. If the “base” finds black/negro/colored/shine untenable, then maybe you should embrace and erase your reliance on them.Polling says 2026 is basically a tossup. We have to get to work man. We MUST win Trump's numbers have basically bounced all the way back. We should have been hammering him on the economy, but we didn't...
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Trump's rising popularity, the budget, 2026 midterms, Democrats' leader, policing, and Musk: May 30-June 2, 2025 Economist/YouGov Poll | YouGov
This week’s Economist/YouGov poll covers Trump's recovering job approval, the budget, the 2026 midterms, government monitoring of social media, race relations, Democrats' leader, and summer expectations.today.yougov.com
Battle for Congress
And...
- Slightly more Americans say they would vote for a Democratic candidate than a Republican candidate if congressional elections were held today
- Among all U.S. adult citizens, 39% say they would vote for the Democrat and 36% for the Republican; 26% say that they are either not sure, would vote for another candidate, or would not vote
- Among registered voters, 44% would pick the Democrat and 42% the Republican
- Americans who voted in the 2024 presidential election favor Democratic congressional candidates by 1 point (44% vs. 43%), while Americans who didn't vote in 2024 favor Democrats by 9 percentage points (29% vs. 20%)
- Democrats lead by 3 points among Americans who voted in the 2022 midterm elections (46% vs. 43%)
- Americans who say they follow politics most of the time favor Democrats by 6 points (47% vs. 41%) while those who follow politics some of the time lean Republican by 3 points (36% vs. 39%) and those who follow politics only now and then favor Democrats by 10 points (38% vs. 28%)
- But Trump now has positive net approval on his handling of immigration — and crime, though it hasn't been asked about since mid-May