In a media environment where narratives shift by the hour, it is not every day that CNN delivers a data point that cuts against the grain of what many viewers have come to expect.
Yet that is exactly what happened during a recent morning broadcast analyzing the outlook for the 2026 midterm elections.
The segment focused on a straightforward but telling metric, net party favorability in midterm cycles under a Republican president.
The numbers presented were not complicated, but they carried serious political implications.
Looking back at 2006 under George W. Bush, Democrats held a commanding +18 advantage in net favorability.
That kind of margin helped fuel a wave election that reshaped Congress.
In 2018, during President Trump’s first term, Democrats again maintained a strong edge at +12, which translated into significant gains and control of the House.
Then came the comparison to the current cycle under President Trump’s second term, and this is where things took a noticeable turn.
According to the data presented on-air, Republicans now hold a +5 advantage. That is a complete reversal from the pattern seen in previous midterm environments.
The CNN correspondent did not dance around the implications.
The analysis included the direct observation that Democrats are “running behind their previous benchmarks.” That statement may sound technical, but the meaning is simple.
In past midterms where Democrats were successful, they entered the cycle with a sizable advantage in voter sentiment. That advantage does not currently exist.
BJ
Democrats are trailing (badly in some cases) in some very predictive areas.
President Trump consistently defies all odds.