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US Midterms 2026
29MAY

Democratic ballot lead eases to D+6.1

1 min read
08:48UTC

The Silver Bulletin generic ballot eased to D+6.1 on 30 June, down from a late-May high of D+6.9 but still a substantial Democratic lead.

PoliticsDeveloping
Key takeaway

The Democratic generic-ballot lead has eased slightly to D+6.1 but stays in wave territory for November.

Nate Silver's Silver Bulletin reported its generic ballot average easing to D+6.1 on Tuesday 30 June, down from the D+6.9 high it reached in late May 1. The generic ballot asks voters which party they would back for Congress, and it remains the most-cited single indicator of the national midterm mood. A late-June reading had already put the split at eight points as Trump's economic approval touched a record low ; the slight easing since leaves the Democratic lead broad but no longer at its peak.

A lead of this size still points to sizeable Republican losses on a neutral map, which is why the party's redistricting and campaign-finance manoeuvres matter so much to holding the House. A drift of under a point in a single month sits within normal polling noise, so the figure to watch is whether the easing continues into the autumn rather than this one reading.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

A 'generic ballot' poll asks voters a simple question: would you rather vote for a Democrat or a Republican for Congress, without naming any actual candidates. Averaging lots of these polls together gives a rough sense of which party has the wind at its back nationally. Nate Silver's tracker of this average eased slightly on 30 June, from a high of D+6.9 in late May to D+6.1. Democrats still hold a clear national lead, but the gap has narrowed a touch after two months of steadily widening.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Generic-ballot averages are rolling figures: each new poll pushes the oldest one out of the window. The easing from D+6.9 to D+6.1 partly reflects the single highest Democratic reading, taken in late May, ageing out of the average as newer, closer surveys replace it. That is a mechanical effect, not necessarily a change in how voters feel.

That mechanical effect makes single-point movements in a rolling average a weaker signal than they look. A real shift in the political environment would show up as a trend across several new polls, rather than one old poll dropping off.

First Reported In

Update #11 · Money uncapped, ballot rules untouched

Silver Bulletin· 1 Jul 2026
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