Poll: Independents Aren’t Who You Think They Are, the Left & America’s 250, and Who Trump Has Lost Since the Inauguration

WASHINGTON, D.C. (June 10, 2026) – Cygnal, one of the nation’s fastest growing and most accurate private polling firms, released the following monthly National Voter Trends (NVT) poll (conducted June 2-3) of 1,500 likely general election voters.

Data vs. Dogma:

Dogma: Since inauguration, Republicans have collapsed with the middle, Trump’s 2024 coalition has disappeared for good, and Democratic intensity alone will carry 2026.

Data: Our data shows a much narrower, more fixable problem: Republicans are still competitive with key pieces of Trump’s old coalition and hold a clear edge on security and enforcement, but they are losing ground on the affordability conversation with the one slice of the middle that actually decides close races.

  • Coalition cracks: Since inauguration, Catholics have slipped net 15 points on Trump’s image but only net 8 points on the GOP’s generic ballot, keeping the door open for Republican candidates. Trump’s 2024 coalition of younger, non‑college‑educated minority voters has moved away from him and now sees Republicans in the same light, forcing the party to quickly rebuild its own brand with those voters.
  • A smaller, pickier center: Independents are not one big middle. Right‑leaning Independents are solidly Republican on the ballot while Democrat‑leaning Independents behave more like Progressive Democrats. The Center Independents who are D+19 with nearly a third still unsure, are the clear group to win over. They lean Republican on security and enforcement but trust Democrats a little more on affordability, so economic pain alone is not moving them.
  • Motivation moving the wrong way for the GOP: In a single month, Republican midterm motivation has slipped while Democratic motivation has risen, driven by younger Republicans and Right‑leaning Independents. Democrats and Democrat‑leaning Independents now lead on voters who say they are “extremely” motivated, leaving Republicans with both a persuasion challenge and a turnout gap.
  • Issue trust and Iran defy the easy narrative: Voters still trust Republicans more on immigration, crime, and cutting wasteful spending, but Democrats now lead on the economy, cost of living, and foreign affairs after a year of erosion in the GOP’s advantage. At the same time, 74 percent want Trump to finalize a deal to pause and eventually end the war with Iran, one of the few moves he has at his disposal that unites Republicans with the persuadable middle, even as high gas prices remain a drag with Independents and under‑$75K households.

“The story is how Republicans are going to navigate a mismatch with voters who are with them on security and enforcement but waffling on what things cost to live in today’s economy,” said Brent Buchanan, Pollster and CEO of Cygnal. “Catholics have moved sharply against Trump personally but only modestly against the GOP on the ballot, and that pattern repeats with Independent women who have soured on Trump but not on the GOP nearly as much. There are multiple other voter groups that are open to a Republican candidate, even if they are no longer fans of the President. That is a fixable problem for candidates who start building their own brand with these voters.”

Our Pollsters’ Top Five:

  1. Cygnal’s Economic Sentiment Index: The firm’s new economic index finds 55 percent of voters in the bottom two tiers, including 38 percent who are ‘Falling Behind’ and 17 percent who are economically ‘Decimated’, with 61 percent of Independents and 60 percent of swing voters also landing in those lower two tiers.
  2. Democrats now lead: on party trust for economy and jobs (45% to 44%), cost of living (45% to 41%), and foreign affairs (43% to 39%), while Republicans still lead on illegal immigration and border security by 13 points, crime and public safety by 8 points, and cutting wasteful government spending by 7 points.
  3. Swing voters: prefer a moderate Republican by 51 percent and a traditional fiscal conservative by 26 percent, while just 7 percent say they are most open to a Trump-aligned Republican candidate, underscoring that candidate profile matters more than partisan intensity in battleground races.
  4. Independents hide three distinct blocs: Right-leaning Independents make up 30 percent of Independents and are R+66 on the generic ballot, Democrat-leaning Independents make up 30 percent and are D+86, while Center Independents make up 36 percent and are the only truly competitive bloc at D+19 with 29 percent still unsure.
  5. America at 250: National pride remains intensely partisan, but the broader warning sign is generational: just 28 percent of voters under age 30 say they are extremely or very proud to be American, compared to 68 percent of voters 65 and older, while 63 percent overall say Americans are less proud than they used to be.

“Voters continue to trust Republicans more on immigration and crime, but it’s a warning sign for the GOP that they have lost the trust edge on the economy and inflation. Historically, Republicans have been trusted as the party of economic growth. Swing voters hold a more negative view of Schumer and Congressional Democrats than Congressional Republicans—so the opening is there for Republicans to earn back that trust on inflation and the economy and draw sharp contrasts with individual Democrats in specific races,” said John Rogers, Pollster and Senior Partner at Cygnal.

“On the eve of America’s 250th, the people planning to fly flags, watch anniversary programming, and celebrate this milestone are overwhelmingly on the right and in the center, while progressive voters are the most likely to say they are not proud to be American, and the most likely to say America was never exceptional. That is a massive cultural divide, and long-term it doesn’t bode well for the political left,” Rogers observed.

Data Nuggets:

  • Generic ballot: Democrats 49%, Republicans 44% (D+5), with 7% undecided in a highly locked‑in electorate.
  • Country direction: 39% say the U.S. is headed in the right direction, 57% say wrong track, a slight rebound from last month but still a negative mood.
  • Top issue priority: Inflation and the economy remains the top priority for voters, with concerns about national security and threats abroad close behind.
  • Trump image: Trump sits at 42% favorable, 55% unfavorable overall, remaining underwater with every persuadable bloc even as his numbers improve on the margins in rural and small‑town America.
  • War with Iran: 74% support Trump finalizing a deal to pause and eventually end the war with Iran, while 48% say the economic impact of higher gas prices is too high to justify a prolonged conflict.
  • News attention: The most politically engaged voters are concentrated on both ideological poles, while the “Swing Voters” and “Soft Opposition” that decide close races are more online, more likely to be on YouTube, and less likely to be glued to traditional cable news.

Cygnal Economic Sentiment Index:

Our new Economic Sentiment Index provides a snapshot of how voters are experiencing the economy in practical terms, not just partisan abstractions. The June reading shows a strained electorate, with 23 percent ‘Doing Well’, 22 percent ‘Managing’, 38 percent ‘Falling Behind’, and 17 percent ‘Decimated’, reinforcing that economic discomfort remains broad even where ballot movement has not yet fully followed. The Index is unique becuase standard economic questions collapse voter sentiment into a single rational dimension and miss the psychological structure that predicts vote behavior. The five-question Economic Sentiment Index battery captures three distinct layers – retrospective vs. prospective orientation, personal vs. national perception, and agency vs. fatalism – producing a composite score that segments respondents into four economic confidence buckets.

Six-Cluster Analysis:

Our six-cluster demographic analysis offers a more precise map of the 2026 electorate than traditional party ID alone, separating the electorate into ‘Committed Democrats’, ‘Anti-Trump Independents’, ‘Soft Opposition’, ‘Swing Voters’, ‘Engaged Republicans’, and the ‘MAGA Base’. The key strategic takeaway is that the election will be decided by a very small slice of the electorate, especially ‘Swing Voters’ and ‘Soft Opposition’ who are younger, more online, more economically strained, and more responsive to candidate profile and tone than to partisan signaling alone. See analysis deck for more detail and poll results by segment.

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Led by CEO and pollster Brent Buchanan, author of America’s Emotional Divide, Cygnal is an award-winning international public opinion and predictive analytics firm that has revolutionized the polling industry with multi-mode polling, message mapping, and emotional analytics. Recognized as the #1 private pollster by the Silver Bulletin and The New York Times, the firm boasts an impressive 95 percent accuracy rating in the 2024 election cycle. With experience in all 50 U.S. states and over 20 countries, Cygnal has strategically guided over 3,100 campaigns and conducted more than 4,800 polls. Its client roster includes high-profile figures such as Governors Greg Abbott and Brian Kemp, along with numerous other Members of Congress, state legislators, caucuses, corporations, and trade associations, solidifying Cygnal as a clear leader in political polling and analytics.