NEWS
Johnson says the House will surge into action in January, advancing an aggressive affordability agenda aimed at lowering living costs, boosting wages, and delivering economic relief for American families nationwide.
Speaker Mike Johnson announced that House Republicans are going to “hit the ground running” in January to codify into law up to 150 of President Donald Trump’s executive orders.
The survey found notable differences in enthusiasm within the Republican coalition. Among voters who favor Trump-aligned policies, 43 percent said they were “very enthusiastic” about voting, compared with 22 percent among those who prefer traditional Republican approaches — suggesting a potential motivational gap within the party’s base.
Enthusiasm levels also varied sharply across age groups. Voters 65 and older expressed the highest enthusiasm, with 57 percent saying they were “very enthusiastic.” That figure dropped to 27 percent among voters ages 18–34 and 35–44.
Among respondents who described themselves as “very enthusiastic,” 64 percent said they discuss politics every day or almost every day, indicating that high engagement correlates strongly with enthusiasm to vote.
No additional demographic details — including gender, region, race, or education — were released beyond the topline results.
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There is also this: Democrats are having severe money woes as the midterm election cycle is set to begin in earnest.
The Democratic National Committee (DNC) secured a substantial loan in preparation for next year’s midterms, as the party struggles with leadership and has little to demonstrate for its government shutdown efforts.
Politico reported on a filing the party made two weeks ago with the Federal Election Commission concerning a $15 million loan.
“The national party committee framed the line of credit as an early investment to boost its candidates in New Jersey and Virginia earlier this month, and help build up state parties ahead of next year’s midterms. But the need for a loan still puts the DNC in sharp contrast with its GOP counterpart, the Republican National Committee, which was sitting on $86 million at the end of September,” the outlet said.