 Polls Democrats have struggled mightily to make news about their major priority: Building enough opposition to the GOP’s tax and spending bill to somehow stop it. There have been few days when that story dominated social media feeds or front pages. But Quinnipiac’s polling, which puts the president’s approval rating at 38% — lower than a lot of other polls, but higher than the support it finds for the OBBBA. Just 10% of Republicans oppose it, but nearly one in four have no opinion of it, and Democrats and independents view it more negatively than they do Trump himself. Just 18% of Republicans favor lower Medicaid funding, which explains why the party’s message is that it is “securing” Medicaid, not cutting it, by pushing non-workers and migrants off the rolls.  Taken before the Trump administration’s mobilization in Los Angeles, this poll is a level-set on what Americans think of deportation. The policy itself is popular, with independents split 50/50, 18% of Democrats in favor, and a supermajority of Republicans driving up the overall rating. By 12 points, more Americans think that the deportations are making the country safer. But by 7 points, more say that they are making the economy weaker. All of this is better for the Trump administration than the numbers of eight years ago, and this is what both parties are trying to shift.  President Trump has wanted to hold a military parade in Washington since 2018. It was never a very popular idea in his first term, and it’s not popular now. Eighty percent of Democrats, 72% of independents, and one in three Republicans agree that the parade isn’t a good way for the government to spend money. There’s no real anti-military sentiment in these numbers, as 68% of voters say defense spending is either at the right level, or it should be increased. The angst is about why the money’s being spent at all. Ads Andrew Cuomo/YouTube- Cuomo for NYC, “Experience.” Every Democrat running for mayor in New York has denounced the Trump administration for moving the National Guard into Los Angeles, calling it “authoritarian,” and explaining how they’d fight that in New York. “Imagine it’s Times Square,” says a worried-sounding narrator in the Cuomo ad, but sounding even more worried about Zohran Mamdani, who’s “passed three bills” in his career, being tasked to stop it. “Trump’s at the city gates. We need someone experienced to slam them shut.”
- Zohran for NYC, “Done Settling.” Zohran Mamdani’s first TV ad after his endorsement from Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) cuts together footage from one of his campaign’s biggest rallies, in Brooklyn — the sort of event no other candidate has been able to pull together. It hits his highlights, of raising the minimum wage, selling cheaper groceries through city-run stores, and freezing rent. But the point is the cheering crowd, and the image of a campaign with momentum.
- Lander 2025, “Cyclone.” Brad Lander is the latest in a list of New York City comptrollers to run for mayor as a numbers-loving wonk who achieves things while other people talk. This spot dramatizes that with the comptroller riding at the front of the Coney Island Cyclone rollercoaster, working on a legal pad and a cell phone as New Yorkers scream around him, and summing up his agenda. The most specific action item is about fighting “Trump and Musk” when they “stole $80 million from New Yorkers,” a reference to a lawsuit to claw back FEMA money. That’s a big story that has faded from daily coverage of the race.
Scooped!Molly Ball’s in-person visit with Gavin Newsom got him talking in the right mood at the right time. There was speculation about him running for president if he navigated this crisis. “I’m not thinking about running, but it’s a path that I could see unfold,” he said. That directness seeped in with other Democrats, so it’s good to have an origin story. It was the most important story of the week about the party. Next - Four days until primaries in Virginia
- 11 days until primaries in New York City and Virginia’s 11th congressional district
- 34 days until the primary in Arizona’s 7th congressional district
- 146 days until off-year elections
- 507 days until the 2026 midterm elections
David Recommends“Everyone likes a winner and striking first usually gives you a big advantage.” Benjamin Netanyahu wrote that in his 2022 memoir, Bibi, finished and published during the brief period when his Likud party was out of power. Having never really covered Israel, outside of the moments when American politics revolved around it, I read it to understand his thinking — or at least, how he sold American allies on it. And it delivered on that. Netanyahu chastises Golda Meir’s cabinet for not waging a pre-emptive strike on Arab states before the Yom Kippur War, exactly the kind of mistake he was criticized for after Oct. 7. “Perhaps they feared being accused of precipitating a new Middle East war, believing that preemptive action would impede support from the United States,” he wrote. “Golda Meir should have known better.” Spend a few hours with this and you understand better what American politicians are going to be asked to support next. |