Illustration of divided Democratic voters contrasting with unified Republicans, based on a poll about party leadership.
Illustration of divided Democratic voters contrasting with unified Republicans, based on a poll about party leadership.
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Poll finds Democrats split on who leads their party

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A new Politico poll finds no consensus among Democratic voters on who leads their party: roughly a third answered "don’t know" or "nobody," while Kamala Harris was the top named individual at about 16 percent. Republicans, by contrast, overwhelmingly point to Donald Trump.

Politico’s survey, conducted online by research firm Public First from October 18–21, polled 2,051 U.S. adults and carries a margin of error of ±2.2 percentage points, according to the outlet. (wjr.com)

Among Americans who voted for Kamala Harris in 2024, about 21 percent said they didn’t know who leads the Democratic Party and 10.5 percent said “nobody.” Harris — the party’s most recent presidential nominee — was named by roughly 16 percent, the only figure to draw double-digit support. Other frequently mentioned names included Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer (about 7.7 percent), House Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries (about 7.4 percent) and former President Barack Obama (about 7.4 percent), with California Gov. Gavin Newsom near 6 percent. Some respondents voiced frustration, offering replies such as “Ugh no one” and “I do not believe there is a leader right now.” (All figures per Politico’s poll as summarized by multiple outlets.) (wjr.com)

Strategists told Politico the ambiguity is unsurprising. “This is where we are, guys … I couldn’t tell you who the leader of the Democratic Party is, either, and I work in Democratic politics,” said Democratic consultant Lauren Harper Pope. Third Way’s Lanae Erickson added that recent wins made it feel like Democrats are “getting our footing back,” but that hasn’t yet translated into a single figure voters see as pointing the party’s direction. (wjr.com)

The poll landed after a string of high‑profile Democratic victories. In off‑year gubernatorial races on Nov. 4, Democrat Abigail Spanberger won in Virginia and Democrat Mikie Sherrill won in New Jersey, according to race calls by the Associated Press. In New York City, state Assembly member Zohran Mamdani, a democratic socialist, won the mayor’s race. And in California, voters approved Proposition 50, a Newsom‑backed measure enabling a new congressional map that could add as many as five Democratic‑leaning U.S. House seats; Republicans have since sued to block it. (apnews.com)

By comparison, Republican voters expressed far more unity: about 81 percent of 2024 Trump voters named Trump as their party’s leader, with roughly 6 percent answering “don’t know” and 2 percent saying “nobody.” The next most common responses were House Speaker Mike Johnson (about 3 percent) and Vice President JD Vance (about 2 percent). (wjr.com)

Methodology note: Politico attributes the polling to Public First and reports the survey was weighted to reflect the U.S. adult population. Figures cited above are drawn from Politico’s published toplines as relayed in contemporaneous coverage. (wjr.com)

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