In the thick of another high-stakes election year, GOP voters are sending a clear message that cuts through the noise of legacy media chatter. It even transcends far more serious pocketbook worries.
A new national survey reveals that Republicans are firmly commited to President Donald J. Trump, rooted in his record on issues that reach beyond dollars and cents. This data was gathered by the Democracy Institute in partnership with me, as host of the current events show News Sight and author of the finance newsletter Dr. Cotto’s Digest.
The poll spotlights a GOP base that stands rock-solid even as broader national surveys show massive economic frustration.
The numbers paint a striking picture of loyalty forged in shared values and proven leadership. When asked if Trump’s performance on non-economic issues outweighs his handling of the economy, a resounding 79 percent of self-identified Republican likely voters said yes. Only 21 percent disagreed.
That is not a lukewarm endorsement. It is a powerful declaration that principles like immigration control, law and order, America-first foreign policy, and combating woke terror carry more weight for these voters than any single economic snapshot.
Dig deeper, and the picture sharpens.
Fully 88 percent affirmed that, when focusing solely on Trump’s actions outside the economy, he remains worthy of their support. Just 12 percent said no. These figures reveal a core truth. Trump’s appeal rests on a foundation that economic headwinds cannot easily erode. Voters see his strength on judicial appointments, national sovereignty, and pushing back against elite institutions that have scorned normal Americans.
This is the kind of steadfastness that wins elections when the pundits least expect it.
Even more telling for November’s midterms, 86 percent declared they would likely vote based mostly on Trump’s non-economic record, even if the economy does not surge before Election Day. A mere 14 percent would not.
This staggering majority is not blind to challenges at the grocery store or gas pump. They simply refuse to let temporary pressures override what they substantively view as enduring successes in protecting the American way of life. That resolve turns vulnerability into strength, signaling that the GOP base is primed and motivated heading into electoral battle.
The ultimate proof of this focus comes in another question. Asked whether Republican voters will turn out mostly to back Trump or their local congressional candidate, a stunning 94 percent chose Trump. Only 6 percent picked the district candidate.
This is loyalty in its purest form.
Republican voters are motivated by the man who delivered results before and promises to fight for them again. This shows the GOP base is not scattered or distracted. They are locked in, rightfully viewing Trump as the standard-bearer who unites their party.
These findings come from a rigorous survey of 910 self-identified Republican likely voters conducted May 26-28 using interactive voice response on mobile and landline phones. The Democracy Institute weighted the sample across gender, age, education, income, region, ethnicity, religion, voting history, and other key factors to mirror the real electorate. With a margin of error of plus or minus 3 percent at 95 percent confidence, the results carry real heft.
The Institute earned its reputation by spotting “shy” voters and cultural currents that other pollsters miss. This most notably happened in 2016 when it accurately projected Brexit within about one point of the actual outcome and correctly forecast Trump’s presidential victory. Legacy media surveys notoriously underestimated his support among working-class and disillusioned voters.
This internal strength stands in sharp contrast to the national mood captured in broader surveys.
The May Marist Poll found 61 percent of Americans disapproving of Trump’s economic management, up from 58 percent earlier, with only 35 percent approving. Many respondents cited personal financial strain, unaffordable local costs, and gas price spikes tied to global tensions. Overall job approval sat at just 37 percent approve versus 59 percent disapprove.
A Quinnipiac University poll released May 20 showed even steeper trouble on the economy. There was only 33 percent approval against 64 percent disapproval. That is the lowest of Trump’s two terms. Among Republicans, 73 percent still approved but 24 percent did not, hinting at pockets of unease. Independents disapproved by a 70-27 margin.
The New York Times/Siena poll from May 11-15 painted a similar scene. Trump’s overall approval hit a second-term low of 37 percent, dragged down by 64 percent disapproval on the economy and widespread frustration over living costs.
These three surveys highlighted how economic perceptions are testing Republican prospects amid global pressures.
Yet the Democracy Institute numbers reveal why these national headwinds hardly doom the GOP. Republican voters are not turning away. They are doubling down on the bigger picture. They care about election integrity, recent conservative Supreme Court rulings, and resistance to woke governance. Many correctly see woke ideology as threatening their communities and children.
Trump’s breathtaking achievements, from immigration crackdowns to energy independence and judicial appointments that protected constitutional rights, resonate deeply. These are the fights that stir the soul of the base and keep them engaged when economic cycles fluctuate.
Democrats understand the terrain and have made affordability their central weapon.
They are pushing the “New Affordability Agenda,” complete with proposals to cap child care, slash housing costs, rein in health premiums, and tackle energy prices. All of that is to be paid for by taxing the wealthy more heavily. Progressive leaders like Rep. Greg Casar and Senate figures such as Chuck Schumer have framed 2026 as the “affordability election,” aiming to tie every problem back to Trump and offer themselves as the practical alternative.
This strategy draws from past wins where pocketbook talk helped candidates exceed expectations.
For all that effort, the Democracy Institute poll exposes the limits. Republican voters overwhelmingly refuse to let affordability arguments eclipse Trump’s broader legacy. They see through attempts to reduce complex national challenges to one issue. Many remember how policies under Biden-Harris led to inflation, open borders, and woke distortions of reality in public policy.
The GOP base's intensity matters enormously for control of Congress.
Inside Elections’ latest projections give Republicans a structural edge in both chambers. In the House, they hold a narrow 220-215 majority, with forecasts showing solid ground for most incumbents, redistricting advantages, and more toss-ups leaning red. Democrats would need a net gain of just three seats to flip the chamber, but the map favors the GOP.
On the Senate side, Republicans sit at 53-47, defending more seats yet with vital lean holds in key states like Iowa, Montana, and Texas. Data suggest Democrats might net two to four seats but face an uphill climb to full control.
The coming months will test whether national economic sentiment overrides bedrock Republican loyalty to President Trump, as well as the GOP's structural edge in Congress. Early signals say no. Republican voters have drawn their line. They back Trump on the issues that touch their homes, heritage, and hopes for the future.
That unity, born of experience and clear-eyed priorities, positions the GOP to weather storms and emerge stronger. When the a party's base stands this firm, the rest of its coalition tends to follow.
