New poll commissioned by NBC News It has been found that 71% of Republican voters now equate to President Donald Trump’s “Make America Great Again” movement.
Trump is of course cry About the opinion poll. “Just Out NBC polls say Maga has tremendous support. I’m not surprised at all!!” he wrote in the Truth Social Post.
Of course, Trump exaggerates the results of his polls, suggesting in his true social post that the whole country is becoming a magazine, not primarily Republicans.
“That shift comes from Republicans,” Bill McIntruff, a Republican poller who supported the NBC poll, told the outlet.
Ultimately, the fact that Trump’s Magazine movement is steadily taking over more Republicans could be a major issue for the GOP in future elections. Republican voters may support Trump, but voters are wider – including independents –Please don’t.
new Opinion survey According to YouGov at the University of Massachusetts in Amherst, only 31% of independents support Trump. Kinipiac University Opinion survey A similar discovery has been made since last week, compared to 58% of independents who have approved the way Trump handles his job as president. Furthermore, 51% of these independents in the Quinnipiac survey are “strongly disapproved” by Trump.
Of course, in swing districts, Republicans need to win in order to be elected, and perhaps even Democrat voters. Since the party was taken over by the Maga, Republican candidates have to accept Trump and his move and accept the primary. And that could hurt them in the general election.
In fact, this dilemma was a problem for Republicans. past.
For example, in the 2024 election, Joe Kent, a Maga Republican. White nationalists deny elections now In Trump’s administration–Lost In 2024, the house race in Washington state was accompanied by Democrat Marie Grusenkamp Perez. Trump carried the district.
Kent was a GOP candidate after him. I was exiled Rep. Jaime Herrera Bitler, a Normie Republican, voted to fire Trump each for his role in the U.S. Capitol riot on January 6, 2021.
And in 2022, Maga hurt Republicans Mid-termwith Trump’s carefully selected candidates Losing Race Republican I should have won In a typical midyear when Democrats were in the White House.
Trump’s picks sank Republicans’ chances to host the Senate that year, losing candidates Mehmet Oz, Blake Masters and Herschel Walker’s easy-to-win Senate races in Pennsylvania, Arizona and Georgia, respectively.
Additionally, the Maga candidate Trump supported in his highly competitive house seat has also been lost. It includes Trump Superfan Junior Majuskidefeated in Ohio’s Republican-leaning district and former Alaska government. Sarapaylinlost in a large house seat in Alaska.

Now, in 2025, even a fairly ordinary Republican. Defend and accept Trumpwhich makes it difficult for them to be embarrassed from the mid-term mag movement with him. Certainly, since Trump was sworn in January, Republicans have been A magnificent special election in the lost state and Badly low performance With a pair of house races in the Trump Country – Sign The backlash against Trump is already here.
Polls show that non-Maga Republican Susan Collins, a Maine Senator, is caught between a rock and a difficult location. Collins is run for reelection with Kamala Harris, the state Democratic presidential candidate who won by Kamala Harris in 2024, but her preference to stomping Trump on certain issues while confronting him about things like tariffs has made her unpopular with both Democrats and Republicans.
From a Public Policy Voting Survey March:
The sense from both sides that Collins is disappointing them leads to the discovery of rare polls in these polarised ages. He was asked whether he considers Collins to be a strong or weak leader for both Harris (19/66) and Trump (28/51) voters. Overall, only 24% characterize her as strong, while 59% call her weak.
These findings place Collins, who could become vulnerable next year in both Republican primary and general elections. 69% of Trump voters think Collins is “too liberal” and perhaps leaves him vulnerable to challenges to the right from someone else. However, 69% of Harris’ voters think she is “too conservative” and suggest that she may struggle to win a kind of crossover support from democratic-leaning voters who have promoted success in the past.
As Collins says, all the signs are very “I’m worried“On elections over the next two years.