Survey Says is a weekly collection rounding up a very powerful polling developments or knowledge factors it’s essential learn about, plus a vibe examine on a development that’s driving politics or tradition.
This yr has began as the most popular on report. In america, the common temperature for the primary 4 months of 2026 was 44.8 levels, a top unmatched in knowledge that goes again to 1895. However as local weather change wreaks havoc at residence and overseas, why don’t People care that a lot?
Nicely, they do care—simply perhaps not that a lot about “local weather change.”
Practically 9 in 10 People say defending the atmosphere is necessary, in accordance with a YouGov ballot from March. And 62% inform the Pew Analysis Middle that the U.S. and different nations aren’t doing sufficient to keep away from the worst results of local weather change. And but, regardless of that near-universal concern, solely 5% name “local weather change and the atmosphere” their most necessary challenge, per the most recent Economist/YouGov survey.
The economic system and inflation are far and away People’ best considerations, although local weather change closely impacts these points. For example, a hotter planet means larger use of air-conditioning, which, in flip, means larger electrical payments. Droughts and intense storms, each exacerbated by world warming, are elevating water payments. Local weather change is a pocketbook challenge, however People wrestle to make the connection.
That wrestle is highlighted by a February ballot from Information for Progress and the Local weather and Group Institute, a progressive assume tank.
The survey included what’s referred to as a “cut up pattern check,” whereby a random half of respondents are proven one wording of a query and the opposite half are proven one other. In that check, half of respondents—doubtless voters, on this case—have been requested how a lot they thought “local weather change” affected the rising value of residing. Sixty-one p.c mentioned it impacted it “drastically” or considerably,” whereas 39% mentioned it had little or no influence.
However the different half of the pattern didn’t see the phrases “local weather change.” As an alternative, they have been requested how a lot “points like pure disasters, warmth waves, and extended droughts” affected rising value of residing. And opinions have been fairly completely different: 80% mentioned these issues had an influence, whereas simply 20% mentioned they didn’t.
Actually, the share who mentioned these points “drastically” affected value of residing (34%) was practically double the quantity who mentioned the identical about local weather change (19%).
“Local weather change” is an summary challenge for many individuals. However a warmth wave isn’t. Individuals concern tornados, hurricanes, and floods. Palpable experiences sway voters higher than ideas.
Democrats usually make these forms of messaging errors.

For instance, final yr, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders and New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez rallied hundreds on a talking tour. Their message of battling corruption and pushing for an financial revolution to learn the working class has severe nationwide enchantment, even in purple areas, the place the tour typically ventured. Nonetheless, that tour’s title was not “Preventing Corruption,” “Preventing for the Working Class,” and even “Preventing the 1%.”
It was “Preventing Oligarchy.”
Sure, the phrase could completely describe the Trump administration: “a authorities by which a small group workouts management particularly for corrupt and egocentric functions.” But it surely’s additionally a phrase that begs a definition, and it’s coming from a celebration that has bled assist amongst these with no faculty diploma, a bunch that makes up a large majority of the presidential citizens.
The Democratic presidential candidate has misplaced assist with non-college-educated voters in every election since 2012, in accordance with left-leaning knowledge agency Catalist. It’s dropped throughout each racial group, with Democratic assist falling by greater than 10 share factors since 2012 amongst Black, Latino, and AAPI voters with no faculty diploma.
Clearly, the star energy of Sanders and Ocasio-Cortez overcame that unwieldy phrase. However ideally, Democrats wouldn’t want to beat their very own messaging in any respect.
A great counterpoint comes from New York Metropolis Mayor Zohran Mamdani. Like Sanders and Ocasio-Cortez, he’s a democratic socialist dead-set on taking over company pursuits and aiding the working class. However he isn’t tossing out many SAT phrases.
As an alternative, throughout final yr’s mayoral marketing campaign, he talked relentlessly about cost-of-living points. His main coverage planks have been two- or three-word phrases: freeze the hire, free buses, construct reasonably priced housing, no-cost childcare, and extra. He messaged concerning the cost-of-living disaster with tangible, on a regular basis examples, just like the hovering costs discovered on the metropolis’s ubiquitous halal meals vans—and the way he’d repair it. Wittily, he termed that specific challenge “halaflation.”
In consequence, Mamdani constructed a younger, multiracial, and multicultural coalition. Within the common election, he blew out his opponent Andrew Cuomo, the Democrat-turned-independent, in majority-Black and -Hispanic precincts. Seventy-five p.c of voters ages 18 to 29 backed him. And even after 100 days in workplace, which he hit in early April, his approval score was nonetheless 18 factors above water, in accordance with a Marist ballot.
Mamdani’s easy, relentless, and tangible messaging must be the blueprint for a way Democrats, moderates and lefties alike, speak about each challenge—together with local weather change.
Whereas most People could not must seek the advice of Webster for what local weather change means, additionally they clearly don’t acknowledge the breadth of its results on their day by day lives. It’s within the tornados that down their energy traces, within the floods that injury their houses, and within the droughts that make their groceries costlier.
Specializing in these issues—the specifics, not the broad thought of the local weather disaster—are how Democrats can win with their messaging.
Any updates?
Conservatives’ struggle on the LGBTQ+ neighborhood is continuous to erode public assist for same-sex marriage, new polling from Gallup finds. After assist peaked in 2021-2022, at 71%, it has now slipped to 65%. The erosion comes virtually completely from Republicans. Their assist for same-sex marriage hit 55% in 2022, however now it’s simply 35%.
Vibe examine
As summer season heats up, it’s necessary to remain cool—a special form of cool. And with regards to whom People see because the nation’s coolest public figures, politics play a giant function.
In April, YouGov fielded a ballot asking People how cool they discovered 36 public figures and teams. The good? Actor Samuel L. Jackson. Forty-one p.c contemplate him “very cool,” and one other 31% say he’s “considerably cool.” Solely 12% contemplate him “not very cool” or “under no circumstances cool.”
In different phrases, he’s not polarizing. Who’s polarizing? Former President Barack Obama. Thirty-four p.c contemplate him “very cool,” whereas 25% say he’s “under no circumstances cool.” That places him on the high of our Every day Kos Coolness Polarization Index.™️ (As with our earlier polarization indexes on meals and horror films, you could find the methodology within the chart’s footnote.)
Additionally polarizing: Beyoncé, Dangerous Bunny, Taylor Swift, and Bruce Springsteen—all 4 of which endorsed former Vice President Kamala Harris within the 2024 presidential election. That’s carried over to 2026, resulting in comparatively giant shares of People—particularly, Republicans—to say these megastars aren’t the bee’s knees, BeyHive or not. (Notably, Jackson additionally endorsed Harris, although that doesn’t appear to have clung to his picture in fairly the identical manner.)
That mentioned, even some outright political figures aren’t that polarizing.
Solely 12% of People assume President Donald Trump is “very cool.” Brutally, that features simply 30% of Republicans. In the meantime, most People (53%) say he’s “not cool in any respect.”















