Majority Of Americans Lean Republican Pew Research Center 2025
Pew Research Center’s annual National Public Opinion Reference Survey (NPORS) has measured partisan affiliation among U.S. adults since 2020. Explore recent patterns of partisan affiliation in the American public and among several key demographic groups below. This fact sheet shows trends in partisan identification among U.S. adults using data from Pew Research Center’s National Public Opinion Reference Survey (NPORS). The most recent NPORS was conducted from Feb.
5 to June 18, 2025, among 5,022 U.S. adults. We field NPORS to produce benchmark estimates for several topics, including Americans’ political and religious affiliations. The accompanying NPORS fact sheet provides additional detail about its methodology, including the questionnaires and links to the datasets. We also periodically publish reports that analyze partisan affiliation trends in more depth (including longer-term trends and additional subgroup analysis), based on data from Pew Research Center’s American Trends Panel and historical trends from... The most recent of these reports – focused on partisanship among registered voters – was published in spring 2024.
Today, Americans are about evenly split between the two parties: 46% identify with or lean toward the Republican Party, and 45% identify with or lean toward the Democratic Party. This balance of partisanship is similar to 2024, but the current near-even division marks a shift from the affiliation advantage the Democratic Party enjoyed a few years ago. Dec 3, 2025 | Health, Politics, Top Stories A Boston judge has dealt a setback to President Donald Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act, ruling that its bid to end Medicaid funding for … Failed Democratic Tennessee congressional candidate Aftyn Behn conceded the election Tuesday night but didn’t end the race quietly, phoning Republican Tennessee Rep-elect Matt Van Epps … Dec 3, 2025 | Featured, Politics, Top Stories
Court-sealed subpoenas targeting congressional Republicans raise constitutional concerns and questions over whether the Justice Department monitored its own investigators. The religious profiles of U.S. adults – how religious they are and what religion they identify with – are closely aligned with their partisan political identities, according to the new Religious Landscape Study (RLS). Generally speaking, Americans who are highly religious are the most solidly Republican constituency. U.S. adults with lower levels of religious engagement more commonly identify with or lean toward the Democratic Party.66
However, Black Americans are a notable exception: At all levels of religiousness, most identify as Democrats or lean toward the Democratic Party. White Americans are far more divided than other racial groups by level of religiousness. Among highly religious White Americans, a solid majority identify with the Republican Party or lean Republican (77%). Among White Americans with low levels of religious engagement, a sizable majority identify with or lean toward the Democratic Party (68%). Americans largely have negative feelings toward both political parties, while positive sentiments are far less common. Three-quarters of U.S.
adults say the Democratic Party makes them feel frustrated, while a smaller majority (64%) says the same of the Republican Party. Roughly half of Americans also say the Democratic Party (50%) and the Republican Party (49%) make them feel angry. Far smaller shares say either party makes them feel hopeful or proud: Americans are more likely to express frustration with the Democratic Party today than they were four years ago (75% today vs. 64% in September 2021). There also have been declines in the shares saying the Democratic Party makes them feel hopeful (28% today vs.
39% in 2021) and proud (16% today vs. 25% in 2021). The new Pew Research Center survey was conducted from Sept. 22 to 28, before the now month-long government shutdown. Most Americans continue to be concerned about potential restrictions on press freedoms in the United States. But there have been major shifts in partisan views since President Donald Trump retook office in January.
Overall, seven-in-ten Americans are at least somewhat concerned about potential restrictions on press freedom – a right that is enshrined in the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. This includes 43% who say they are extremely or very concerned. These numbers are almost identical to the findings of an April 2024 survey, when 41% said they were extremely or very concerned and an additional 29% were somewhat concerned. Pew Research Center conducted this analysis to better understand Americans’ attitudes toward the freedom of the press in the United States and how these attitudes might be shifting. We first asked this set of questions in 2024.
The Center has asked about press freedom and free speech more broadly, both domestically and globally, for the past decade. This survey of 5,123 U.S. adults was conducted from Feb. 24 to March 2, 2025. Everyone who took part in this survey is a member of the Center’s American Trends Panel (ATP), a group of people recruited through national, random sampling of residential addresses who have agreed to take... This kind of recruitment gives nearly all U.S.
adults a chance of selection. Interviews were conducted either online or by telephone with a live interviewer. The survey is weighted to be representative of the U.S. adult population by gender, race, ethnicity, partisan affiliation, education and other factors. Read more about the ATP’s methodology. Here are the questions used for this analysis, along with responses, and its methodology.
Pew Research Center conducted this study to continue tracking news consumption and trust across a wide range of specific news sources. We last published similar reports in 2020 (based on a 2019 survey) and 2014. We regularly ask people about their news habits on various platforms (e.g., television, print, radio and digital) and their levels of trust in information from social media and national/local news organizations in general. But this study is designed to be more specific, looking at Americans’ familiarity with, usage of and views toward 30 individual news sources. To learn more about how we chose the 30 news sources, please visit the methodology. Respondents first received a list of all 30 news sources and were asked to select all the sources that they had heard of.
Next, for all the sources a respondent had heard of, they were asked which ones they generally trust as sources of news. Then, for all sources that they had heard of but did not say they trust, they were asked if they generally distrust those sources as sources of news. Finally, the survey asked respondents which sources they regularly get news from (again, only among the sources they already indicated they had heard of before). This survey design is similar to one used in a 2019 survey but not directly comparable. The 2025 survey asked Americans which sources they regularly get news from; in 2019, we asked people which sources they got political and election news from within the past week. We also changed several of the 30 sources to reflect the current news media landscape.
After a whirlwind start to his second term – marked by a flurry of executive orders and cuts to the federal workforce – President Donald Trump will address a joint session of Congress on... Ahead of the speech, here’s a look at U.S. public opinion on key policy issues, drawn from recent Pew Research Center surveys. This analysis looks at Americans’ views on key national issues ahead of President Donald Trump’s address to a joint session of Congress on March 4. (Traditionally, the first such address given during a president’s term is not called a “State of the Union” address.) The findings in this analysis primarily come from a survey of 5,086 U.S.
adults conducted Jan. 27-Feb. 2, 2025. Everyone who took part in this survey is a member of the Center’s American Trends Panel (ATP), an online survey panel that is recruited through national, random sampling of residential addresses. This way nearly all U.S. adults have a chance of selection.
The survey is weighted to be representative of the U.S. adult population by gender, race, ethnicity, partisan affiliation, education and other categories. Read more about the ATP’s methodology. Links to additional ATP surveys used for this analysis, including information about their methodologies, are available in the text. For the most part, voting patterns across demographic groups in the 2024 presidential election were not substantially different from the 2020 and 2016 elections. But Donald Trump’s gains among several key groups of voters proved decisive in his 2024 victory.To explore voting patterns among subgroups over time, refer to detailed tables.
Hispanic voters were divided in 2024, a major shift from 2020 and 2016. In 2020, Joe Biden won Hispanic voters by 25 percentage points, and Hispanic voters supported Hillary Clinton by an even wider margin in 2016. But Trump drew nearly even with Kamala Harris among Hispanic voters, losing among them by only 3 points. Black voters also moved to Trump but remained overwhelmingly Democratic.Trump nearly doubled his support among Black voters between 2020 and 2024: 8% voted for him in 2020 vs. 15% last year. Still, 83% of Black voters backed Harris.
Men – especially men under 50 – backed Trump by larger margins. Men supported Trump by a wider margin than in 2020. Trump narrowly won men under age 50, a shift from 2020 when men in that age group favored Biden by 10 points. As in prior elections, a change in voters’ partisan allegiances – switching from the Democratic to the Republican candidate or vice versa – proved to be a less important factor in Trump’s victory than... In the overall electorate and among key demographic groups, Republican-leaning eligible voters simply were more likely to turn out than Democratic-leaning eligible voters in 2024. In 2024, conservatives and moderates continued to outpace liberals
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Pew Research Center’s Annual National Public Opinion Reference Survey (NPORS)
Pew Research Center’s annual National Public Opinion Reference Survey (NPORS) has measured partisan affiliation among U.S. adults since 2020. Explore recent patterns of partisan affiliation in the American public and among several key demographic groups below. This fact sheet shows trends in partisan identification among U.S. adults using data from Pew Research Center’s National Public Opinion Ref...
5 To June 18, 2025, Among 5,022 U.S. Adults. We
5 to June 18, 2025, among 5,022 U.S. adults. We field NPORS to produce benchmark estimates for several topics, including Americans’ political and religious affiliations. The accompanying NPORS fact sheet provides additional detail about its methodology, including the questionnaires and links to the datasets. We also periodically publish reports that analyze partisan affiliation trends in more dept...
Today, Americans Are About Evenly Split Between The Two Parties:
Today, Americans are about evenly split between the two parties: 46% identify with or lean toward the Republican Party, and 45% identify with or lean toward the Democratic Party. This balance of partisanship is similar to 2024, but the current near-even division marks a shift from the affiliation advantage the Democratic Party enjoyed a few years ago. Dec 3, 2025 | Health, Politics, Top Stories A ...
Court-sealed Subpoenas Targeting Congressional Republicans Raise Constitutional Concerns And Questions
Court-sealed subpoenas targeting congressional Republicans raise constitutional concerns and questions over whether the Justice Department monitored its own investigators. The religious profiles of U.S. adults – how religious they are and what religion they identify with – are closely aligned with their partisan political identities, according to the new Religious Landscape Study (RLS). Generally ...
However, Black Americans Are A Notable Exception: At All Levels
However, Black Americans are a notable exception: At all levels of religiousness, most identify as Democrats or lean toward the Democratic Party. White Americans are far more divided than other racial groups by level of religiousness. Among highly religious White Americans, a solid majority identify with the Republican Party or lean Republican (77%). Among White Americans with low levels of religi...