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Nearly Half of Americans Identify as Politically Independent

Nearly half of Americans now identify as political independents rather than members of either major party, according to a new CNN poll, marking the highest level of partisan independence recorded by the network in more than a decade.

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The survey found that 47% of Americans consider themselves independents, an increase of roughly 10 percentage points since the period following President Donald Trump's first term. The figure is close to the previous high of 48% recorded in CNN polling during 2015.

Shift Away From Party Labels

Democrats and Republicans divide the rest of the population almost evenly. The poll found that 27% of Americans identify as Democrats and 26% as Republicans.

Many independents, however, still lean toward one of the two major parties. When those partisan leanings are taken into account, 39% align more closely with Democrats, 37% with Republicans, and 25% say they do not lean toward either side.

Even when respondents who initially expressed no preference were asked to choose a side, the electorate remained closely divided, underscoring the narrow political balance in the United States.

CNN's polling shows neither party has maintained a significant advantage in overall identification since 2021, when Democrats held a six-point lead. Since then, the gap between the two parties has remained at about one percentage point each year.

Registered Voters Show GOP Decline

Among registered voters, Democrats now hold a slight edge. The poll found that 31% identify as Democrats, compared with 28% who identify as Republicans, while 41% say they belong to neither party.

That represents a notable change from 2024, when 34% of registered voters identified as Republicans, 31% as Democrats and 35% as independents.

The findings suggest Republicans have lost some ground among voters since last year's election cycle, potentially adding to concerns for the party ahead of the midterm elections as Trump's approval ratings have weakened.

Younger Voters Driving Independence

Several demographic groups have moved away from Republican identification since 2024, including younger voters, men and White voters without college degrees.

Among voters under 45, only 17% now identify as Republicans, down from 26% in 2024. Democratic identification among that group has remained largely unchanged at 33%, while half now say they do not belong to either party.

Similar trends were observed among men, particularly younger men, and among White voters without college degrees, with many shifting toward independent status rather than switching directly to the Democratic Party.

Independents Less Engaged Politically

The poll also highlights key differences between independents and partisan voters.

Independents tend to be younger, with 63% under the age of 50, compared with 52% of Democrats and 38% of Republicans. They are also more likely than Republicans to live in urban areas, though less likely than Democrats to do so.

Income levels among independents are generally lower, with nearly half reporting annual household earnings below $50,000.

Politically, independents appear less engaged than partisans. Only 67% are registered to vote, compared with more than 80% of Democrats and Republicans. Just one-quarter say they regularly seek out political news.

Poll Methodology

The CNN poll was conducted by SSRS between May 7 and May 31 among 2,480 adults nationwide using online and telephone interviews. Participants were selected through address-based sampling and random cellphone number sampling. The survey has a margin of error of plus or minus 2.7 percentage points.

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Adapted by ASEAN Now. Source 17 June 2026

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Roadsternut Gold Member

Roadsternut

Advanced Member
13 minutes ago, MikeandDow said:

Well i have a diffrent understanding

A political party is defined as ‘any group, no matter how loosely organised, seeking to elect governmental office-holders under a given label’

The UK is officially a multi-party system, though it has historically operated as a two-party system in practice due to its voting mechanics.

While multiple parties run and win seats, the Labour Party and the Conservative Party have monopolized power and alternated forming governments for over a century. However, the traditional two-party dynamic is experiencing unprecedented fragmentation.

The United States operates under a de-facto two-party system, dominated by the Democratic Party and the Republican Party. While smaller "third" parties exist (such as the Libertarian Party and the Green Party), the two major parties have won every presidential election since 1852 and hold almost all seats in Congress

The point i amtrying to get over is Limited Representation and is a very old system and to make matters worse the yanks throw in the Electoral college which Disenfranchises voters and can lead to Popular vote conflicts: which can lead to a president being elected who actually lost the national popular vote

So the UK never elects a government that fails to win the popular vote?🙄

Since 1924, only one UK government has won the majority of the popular vote, and it did it twice; the National government in 1931 and 1935.

In your post, you should not be using slang to identify particular nationalities. Since then, generally majority governments generally win 40-45% of the popular vote. Starmer secured 34%, indicating a majority that's a mile wide, but an inch deep. Boris got 44% in 2019 with the Red Wall. The Coalition government got 36%.

"Two-party system in practice" and "de-facto two-party system" literally means the same thing. "De Facto" means "in practice".

MikeandDow Ruby Member

MikeandDow

Advanced Member
6 minutes ago, Roadsternut said:

So the UK never elects a government that fails to win the popular vote?🙄

Since 1924, only one UK government has won the majority of the popular vote, and it did it twice; the National government in 1931 and 1935.

In your post, you should not be using slang to identify particular nationalities. Since then, generally majority governments generally win 40-45% of the popular vote. Starmer secured 34%, indicating a majority that's a mile wide, but an inch deep. Boris got 44% in 2019 with the Red Wall. The Coalition government got 36%.

"Two-party system in practice" and "de-facto two-party system" literally means the same thing. "De Facto" means "in practice".

6 minutes ago, Roadsternut said:

So the UK never elects a government that fails to win the popular vote

does my post state that !!!

And why should you not use slang to identify particular nationalities it is the same as yanks calling you limey !! You should get thicker skin if it hurts your feeling !!

Two-party system in practice" and "de-facto two-party system as you Captain Obvious". points out is the same thing

temuFarang Senior Member

temuFarang

Member
54 minutes ago, MikeandDow said:

The point i amtrying to get over is Limited Representation and is a very old system and to make matters worse the yanks throw in the Electoral college which Disenfranchises voters and can lead to Popular vote conflicts: which can lead to a president being elected who actually lost the national popular vote

The UK’s Parliamentary system is older than the US system.

MikeandDow Ruby Member

MikeandDow

Advanced Member
2 minutes ago, temuFarang said:

The UK’s Parliamentary system is older than the US system.

Oh wow !!! who cares since i was talking about the American system ! and the UK system are diffrent The US is a presidential system while the UK is parliamentary

temuFarang Senior Member

temuFarang

Member
2 minutes ago, MikeandDow said:

Oh wow !!! who cares since i was talking about the American system ! and the UK system are diffrent The US is a presidential system while the UK is parliamentary

You mentioned it's old. However, the UK system is older, and another poster pointed out the lack of a majority in the UK government. It seems the parliamentary system leaves more people disenfranchised.

MikeandDow Ruby Member

MikeandDow

Advanced Member
2 minutes ago, temuFarang said:

You mentioned it's old. However, the UK system is older, and another poster pointed out the lack of a majority in the UK government. It seems the parliamentary system leaves more people disenfranchised.

Who cares about the UK system i was not talking about the UK, and blow me down i would not have guessed the uk system was older !

temuFarang Senior Member

temuFarang

Member
2 minutes ago, MikeandDow said:

Who cares about the UK system i was not talking about the UK, and blow me down i would not have guessed the uk system was older !

If you truly have no interest in the UK system, what motivated you to take the time to compare the two systems?

MikeandDow Ruby Member

MikeandDow

Advanced Member
3 minutes ago, temuFarang said:

If you truly have no interest in the UK system, what motivated you to take the time to compare the two systems?

I was replying to a poster that is what you do in a forum !

temuFarang Senior Member

temuFarang

Member
2 minutes ago, MikeandDow said:

I was replying to a poster that is what you do in a forum !

I responded to your message. Goodbye.

wwest5829 Platinum Member

wwest5829

Advanced Member
14 hours ago, TedG said:

Can you please cite an example of which polices led to this?

With sincere apology, Ted, I am dealing with other things currently. Do keep in mind my background in considering my responses. Currently trying to keep up currently while reading "an American History of Cuba" by Ferrer.

14 hours ago, TedG said:

Can you please cite an example of which polices led to this?

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