Veteran political commentator Chris Cillizza sounded the alarm this week over what he called an “unprecedented crisis of confidence” within the Democratic Party, citing new polling that shows a dramatic erosion in both public perception and internal morale.
Speaking on his YouTube channel Thursday, the NewsNation contributor broke down polling data from the Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research and Echelon Insights, concluding that the Democratic Party is facing one of its most serious branding challenges in decades.
“The extent to which Democrats — not Republicans — think the Democratic brand is broken is pretty stunning to me,” said Cillizza, who has covered American politics for nearly 30 years.
According to the AP-NORC poll released Wednesday, only around a third of Democrats say they are “very optimistic” or “somewhat optimistic” about the future of their own party. That’s a sharp decline from July 2024, when 60% of Democrats expressed optimism amid the transition from President Joe Biden to Vice President Kamala Harris following Biden’s widely critcized debate performance against Donald Trump.
“Maybe you get a little of the excitement of switching from Biden to Harris in those numbers,” Cillizza explained. “But even in that chaotic moment, there was still optimism. Now, it’s cratered.”
By contrast, a majority of Republicans — 55% — said they were optimistic about their party’s future, showcasing a significant enthusiasm gap heading into the next election cycle.
Adding to the concern was a new Puck News/Echelon Insights survey, in which voters were asked to name the first word that comes to mind when they think of the Democratic Party. Among all likely voters, the most common responses were: “liberal,” “weak,” and “corrupt.” Even more striking, Cillizza noted, was that among Democratic and Democratic-leaning voters, the most common word was simply: “weak.”
“That ‘weak’ word keeps coming up,” Cillizza said. “It’s coming up in focus groups, it’s coming up in polling. Even Democrats describe themselves and their party that way.”
He added that this is a stark contrast to how many voters — even some who don’t align with him politically — view Donald Trump.
“Trump is seen as tough. As a fighter. Whether you agree with him or not, that’s the perception,” Cillizza said. “You can’t beat a ‘tough fighter’ brand with a ‘weak and ineffective’ one — especially when your own voters are the ones using those words.”
The polling arrives at a critical time for Democrats, who are still trying to rally around Vice President Harris as the party’s de facto leader following her 2024 election loss. Harris struggled to consolidate support among independents and swing-state voters, many of whom remain skeptical of her leadership ability or her distance from unpopular Biden-era policies.
Political analysts say the Democratic Party is grappling with both image and substance issues — perceived as too passive in the face of Republican aggression, while also mired in internal divisions over progressive and centrist priorities.
“These numbers, and those words, even for me — someone who knew the brand was not in great shape — were pretty shocking,” Cillizza concluded.
While the 2026 midterms are still well over a year away, Democrats face mounting pressure to rebrand and reenergize their base, particularly as Donald Trump continues to command enthusiastic support and reaches his highest approval ratings throughout either of his terms.
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Big yes to everything you said here.
We can only hope this poll means something. Too many of them don’t.
There’s only one way for the Democrat Party to survive, and that will be to separate into two (or more) parties. Like the Whigs morphed into the Republican Party, the only way the Democrats can rise above this is to separate from the individuals and groups that are now totally in control of the dialogue of the Party. The existing organization will not surrender control to moderates in the party as they have ventured too far to the Left (and beyond). A new party will exist separately from this one, as it will not bend in its philosophy. It will die from lack of public support just as radical parties have before it.