NEWS
Media Polls vs. Public Memory: As outlets claim Kamala Harris has surged past Trump and JD Vance in popularity, critics question whether polling reflects reality or manufactured narrative—highlighting the growing disconnect between media storytelling, political outcomes, and what voters actually experienced and remember.
Recently, a Politico poll made waves online by suggesting that Vice President Kamala Harris is now more popular than former President Donald Trump and Senator J.D. Vance. On the surface, headlines like this jump off the page — but when you look deeper, it doesn’t stand up to scrutiny.
Let’s break this down.
The Same Kamala Harris… Just Months Ago
This isn’t a hypothetical political figure. This is the Kamala Harris who:
Struggled to articulate any substantive achievements in her role as border czar.
Seemed to brush off serious media questions with nervous laughter.
Watched the southern border deteriorate under her watch.
Did not campaign in key swing states during the 2024 election — a retreat that mirrored her sharp losses.
Was overlooked by her own party when President Biden stepped aside.
If that’s the resume of someone climbing in popularity, the standards have changed.
Contrast That With Real Results
Now compare that with the man the poll claims she’s more popular than — Donald Trump:
Historic Victory: Trump won one of the biggest electoral landslides in modern U.S. history.
Border Security: The U.S.–Mexico border is the most secure it’s been in years.
Fentanyl Trafficking Down: Enforcement efforts cut trafficking significantly — nearly 50%, according to official data.
Economic Growth: Over $18 trillion in domestic and global investment poured into the U.S. economy under Trump.
Tax Relief: Working Americans saw $1,000–$2,000 in tax relief in their paychecks.
Peace Through Strength: He ended long-standing wars, choosing diplomacy over escalation.
These are tangible, measurable outcomes — not headlines.
So Why This Poll Now?
When a major news outlet like Politico publishes a poll that flies in the face of clear public memory — when the data seems out of touch with lived experience — it raises a question:
Is this journalism or narrative?
This is the same media ecosystem that confidently told us:
Inflation was transitory
The border was secure
Biden was sharp as a tack
…only to be proven wrong again and again.
Americans Remember Results
Polls are snapshots, not truth. But the everyday realities voters experience stick with them:
Families struggling at the border?
Workers seeing pay raises from tax cuts?
Communities safer from dangerous drugs?
These are not memory games — they are lived experiences.
So when the headlines shout one thing, but everyday America feels another, it’s natural to question which narrative fits reality.
Final Takeaway
This latest poll isn’t news — it’s a narrative push. It’s a convenient story that helps certain media outlets reshape a narrative after losing credibility in the 2024 election cycle.
Real popularity isn’t about catchy headlines — it’s about results that affect lives. And Americans remember those results.