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New 2028 Polls Show a Clear Frontrunner on the Right, Chaos on the Left

New 2028 Polls Show a Clear Frontrunner on the Right, Chaos on the Left

The most striking takeaway from this survey is that Harris—who maintained a clear lead over other Democrats in the months following the election—has lost her advantage and now trails behind Buttigieg.

Yes, it’s super early to be thinking about the 2028 presidential election. Be that as it may, polling in the race has already begun.

New polling of the GOP presidential primary from the Emerson College Polling Center shows Vice President J.D. Vance dominating the Republican field with 46% support, a 34-point lead over his closest rival, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who stands at 12%. Florida Governor Ron DeSantis follows with 9%, while Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. registers at 5%.

I was genuinely surprised by the size of Vance’s lead over Rubio and DeSantis—both of whom bring deep experience and broad appeal to key segments of the Republican base, including national security hawks, suburban moderates, and Sun Belt conservatives.

But I suppose it’s only natural for a sitting vice president to lead the pack, particularly one who has performed so admirably on both the national and international stages since taking office. Vance’s deep loyalty to President Donald Trump and the MAGA agenda resonates strongly with voters determined to ensure that the movement continues beyond Trump’s time in the White House.

Additionally, Vance’s personal story strikes a chord with many voters, especially those in Rust Belt and Appalachian communities who feel overlooked by elite politicians. Raised in a poor, working-class, and often dysfunctional family in Ohio, he pulled himself up by his bootstraps. After serving in the military, Vance worked his way through Yale Law School, found success in business, and ultimately rose to become the vice president of the United States. It’s a quintessential American story—one of grit, perseverance, and self-reliance.

Emerson’s poll of the 2028 Democratic presidential primary shows no clear winner. Former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg leads the field with support of 16%, followed by former Vice President Kamala Harris at 13%, California Gov. Gavin Newsom at 12%, Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro at 7%, New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez at 7%, and Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders at 5%.

The most striking takeaway from this survey is that Harris—who maintained a clear lead over other Democrats in the months following the election—has lost her advantage and now trails behind Buttigieg.

Another notable finding: none of the candidates have managed to generate more than lukewarm support.

These dismal results reflect the chaos and confusion that have engulfed the Democratic Party since the election. While some of the prospective candidates, such as Newsom and Buttigieg, have already begun jockeying for position and influence, no individual has managed to connect with the public in a meaningful way. With 16% being the highest level of support reached by any one candidate, the field remains fragmented, uninspired, and far from producing a unifying figure who can lead the party forward.

It will likely remain this way unless and until the Democratic Party can get its act together. Right now, it is adrift—sorely lacking a cohesive message, a compelling vision, or any real sense of direction. The party is fractured, its leading figures are either hesitant or uninspiring, and its base is left wondering what, exactly, the Democrats stand for beyond opposing Donald Trump.

Resistance to Trump may have been enough to mobilize voters in past cycles, but it’s not a sustainable campaign strategy. What the party needs now is a clear, forward-looking platform: a set of principles and objectives that its leaders and voters can rally around. Without that unifying message, the internal chaos and public apathy will only deepen.

And time is running out. As crazy as it sounds, the 2028 presidential primaries begin in just 18 months. Eight months have passed since the election, and the party is just as rudderless and divided as it was in November — no closer to a solution, and no clearer on what it actually stands for. If Democrats don’t find their footing soon, they risk heading into the next election not as a party ready to lead, but as one still searching for a reason to exist.


Elizabeth writes commentary for Legal Insurrection and The Washington Examiner. She is an academy fellow at The Heritage Foundation. Please follow Elizabeth on LinkedIn or X.

 

 

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Comments

PrincetonAl | June 27, 2025 at 5:10 pm

Buttigieg, Gruesome, or AOC.

The commie establishment wants Buttigieg, the commie voters want AOC but she has to run, and Governor Gruesome wants himself.

    DSHornet in reply to PrincetonAl. | June 27, 2025 at 6:27 pm

    I think it’s hilarious that Buttgig is ahead of Airhead Harris and Governor Hairgel. Their top three are two losers and an egotist. Stay the course, Dimocrats!
    .

      henrybowman in reply to DSHornet. | June 27, 2025 at 6:34 pm

      I understand now.
      The Republican voters are nominating a US President.
      The Democrat voters are holding People’s Choice Awards.

They are nuts if they don’t start grooming Desantis. Not saying he has to be it for 2028. The guy is a leader.

    sheepgirl in reply to Andy. | June 27, 2025 at 6:31 pm

    So are Rubio and Vance. We have a deep bench for a change. I just want whoever wins to appoint one of the runner ups to SCOTUS. We need a little less judiciary experience and a little more real life experience on there.

      Eric R. in reply to sheepgirl. | June 28, 2025 at 3:47 pm

      Alito and Thomas are both expected to retire before the new Congress takes over. DeSantis deserves a big spot somewhere; I think the one thing he would take to not be in the Presidential sweepstakes would be a USSC justice spot.

What? No Mamdani or Warren on the Democrat list?

No Murphey or van Hollen on the dramacrat side either

henrybowman | June 27, 2025 at 6:35 pm

Surely they have not forgotten Al Green!

destroycommunism | June 27, 2025 at 6:57 pm

wow imagine those choices

one who licks bu tts

and the other a dad who has lactation powers

The comparison is stark. Look at the Cabinets now and then, too. It’s reassuring, probably even to the haters.

thad_the_man | June 27, 2025 at 8:32 pm

Actually I’m now leaning RDS ( nevermind his sandwich eating habits ). For now what has happened looks good, but he is hoping to “contain” Iran just like HW wawnted to contain Iraq instead of finishing them off. We didn’t have to any more military invention, just not stop Israel who had them on the ropes. I think Israel has three years to come around and bit Vance on the ass.

Buttigieg? Lemme see: a mediocre mayor of a middling Indiana town who couldn’t keep the potholes filled and, by pretty much all accounts, a failed Secretary of Transportation. Yeah, he’d be a perfect Democrat presidential nominee…for JD Vance.

The problem isn’t as the author points out that the Dems have no principles and objectives. The problem is that they do and Americans reject them. Open borders, defund police, illegal aliens over citizens, coddle Iran, green energy no matter the cost or if it works, boy in girls sports, trans the kids at any age, gay propaganda jammed into grade schools and so on.
People see it and don’t want it.

E Howard Hunt | June 28, 2025 at 8:53 am

Buttigieg, no matter his current position, has a reputation of coming from behind. He should exploit his biggest asset (homosexualism) by having Obama proceed with a divorce, come out of the closet, and join him as the number 2 man on the gay ticket.

I am surprised there is not more interest in “our first Latino President”, Marco Rubio. IMO appeal to a key demographic is a distinct plus for attracting some voters from the other party. Competence does not seem to cut it, as DeSantis appears to have already demonstrated. It certainly appears not to be a criterion for attracting Democratic voters.

    destroycommunism in reply to jb4. | June 28, 2025 at 10:16 am

    and although his current star power is 10000% based on djt being his boss

    couldnt agree with you more

    should marco stick with this winning attitude

    Id give him my vote over vance…all things being equal

    destroycommunism in reply to jb4. | June 28, 2025 at 10:18 am

    DeS would be my choice but I think the problems that would occur with poc NOT VOTING FOR MARCO would send latinos even further into the gop party which would be great

Alex deWynter | June 28, 2025 at 10:50 am

Being spoiled for choice as a conservative is not a position I ever expected to be in, and yet here I am.

Frezz in the hizzy | June 28, 2025 at 12:39 pm

I still think Wes Moore will be a late comer that could shake things up – but it might not be enough to hold off the aforementioned all-gay PB BHO ticket.

I believe the GOP will pick Vance as he is from Ohio and likely would allow them to pick up PA, MI, and WI. Rubio and DeSantis are both from Florida and that is solid Republican.

The Dems at this time have no leader. The Dems only positions are we hate everything Trump does, we support all illegal aliens, and we support global elites. This will continue to move to the next Republican leader. The MSM is dying and that will continue as more people have had enough of no truth.

I think most of the political insiders know who the Dem nominee will be in 2028, and for now, Emerson, being a good leftist polling outfit, is keeping him out of the polling.

The Dem nominee will be Maryland Governor Wes Moore. Bank on it.

And with all due respect to Vance, if Moore is the left’s nominee, I think that DeSantis should be ours.

People are moving to Florida but are leaving Maryland. It is an excellent comparison, and almost all Republicans consider him to be the best governor in the country, hands down.