At Semafor, David Weigel addresses the question, “Trump’s falling in polls. Why aren’t Democrats benefiting?,” and answers: “Democratic leaders love talking about the president’s flagging poll numbers. Their own numbers, not so much…When House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries got asked recently to react to a colleague who worried that the party was too focused on El Salvador, he pivoted: “Our reaction is that Donald Trump has the lowest public approval rating of any president in modern American history.”…One day later, after Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer boasted that “Trump has the lowest 100-day approval rating since they started polling 80 years ago,” CNN’s Manu Raju turned the question back on him. Schumer’s own approval rating was 17% in CNN’s poll, much lower than Trump’s…“Polls come and go,” said Schumer. “Our party is united.”…Polls nonetheless put Democrats in a notably weak position for a party aiming to win back Congress next year. In special elections held since Trump took office, Democrats have usually beat expectations, holding their Wisconsin Supreme Court majority and winning a slew of down-ballot races. But the party’s image has not recovered from 2024, and its marks in the spring of 2017 were higher than today.”
From the conclusion of “Who’s the Greatest Grifter of Them All?” by opinion essayist Thomas B. Edsall at The New York Times: “For Trump, a critical determinant of his ability to continue to profit from cryptocurrency will be the outcome of the 2026 election…If, as appears possible if not probable, Democrats retake the House next year, the likelihood is that Trump might well be impeached for a third time, and crypto would almost certainly be a centerpiece of that proceeding…The prospects that two-thirds of the Senate would vote to convict Trump of any impeachment charges about crypto — or anything else — are, however, slim to none, even if Democrats surprise everyone and retake the upper chamber…So what Trump can look forward to is holding office through to Jan. 20, 2029, while he and his business partners continue to come up with new digital currencies and new marketing techniques to raise their potential profits…At that point, with Trump no longer in office, the Supreme Court will once again be able to rule that any pending complaints involving foreign or domestic emoluments are moot…In other words, Trump is well on his way to becoming the greatest grifter of all time.”
Some notes and a map from Kyle Kondik’s “Notes on the State of the Senate: The Post-Kemp Battlefield” at Sabato’s Crystal Ball: “Republicans missed out on a top recruiting target earlier this week, as Gov. Brian Kemp (R-GA) decided not to challenge Sen. Jon Ossoff (D-GA)…Georgia remains a Toss-up in our ratings even as Ossoff’s reelection path got clearer… Another place where Democrats are playing defense, Michigan, remains a Toss-up, while a couple of other open Democratic seats in Democratic-leaning states, Minnesota and New Hampshire, are developing better for Democrats than Republicans…While there have already been many key developments in the race for the Senate in 2026, history shows that key candidate decisions may still be months away in some places…Republicans remain favored to retain control of the Senate in 2026, and we are not changing any ratings in this update.” Here’s the map:
WaPo columnist E. J. Dionne, Jr. probes the reasons why “Trump boomerang sinks Australia’s right wing,” and writes that “voters Down Under offered a potent lesson about the boomerang effect to Donald Trump and his MAGA faithful. The president hoped his dominance of the world stage would inspire an international swing toward the nationalist far right. Instead, Australians — angry and mystified by Trump’s tariffs — gifted their center-left prime minister, Anthony Albanese, whose Labor Party trailed in the polls only a few months ago, a landslide victory few predicted…Labor’s triumph came less than a week after Canada’s voters, in an election even more clearly defined by Trump, rescued the center-left Liberal Party from the polling wilderness and ratified Mark Carney as their prime minister…Wayne Swan, president of the Labor Party and former deputy prime minister, told me that Albanese won because “the economic imperative overrode the cultural imperative.”…Yet on Thursday, another center-left leader, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, suffered a real electoral setback at the hands of the far-right Reform UK party, which took a parliamentary seat from Labor on a huge swing in a special election. Reform UK also marched across Britain in local elections that dealt serious defeats to Labor and, even more dramatically, to the traditionally center-right Conservative Party. You can bet that Trump will try to ignore the triumphs of Albanese and Carney and instead talk up Nigel Farage, Reform UK’s leader and a Trump ally.” In Australia, “A signal moment came when Dutton, during a debate, accused Albanese of being “weak.” Albanese shot back: “Kindness isn’t weakness.” Dionne concludes, “Trump’s tariffs can’t stop good questions from crossing borders or oceans. Importing that one would not affect our balance of payments, but it could alter the balance of decency in our politics. Voters in Australia and Canada would like us to think about it.”