Trump’s Support Among Republicans Holds Strong at 87%, While Nevada Democrats Face Voter Fatigue
By TheNevadaGlobeStaff, November 29, 2025 9:00 pm
President Donald Trump continues to dominate the Republican landscape, and the latest numbers make it crystal clear: GOP voters aren’t budging. According to fresh CNN data, 87 percent of Republicans approve of the president—the exact same sky-high mark he held six months ago.
In an era when political winds can shift in an afternoon, that kind of stability is no small thing. It’s a testament to the appeal of Trump’s economic agenda, his border crackdown, and his unapologetically pro-America posture that voters clearly feel is finally delivering results again.
Meanwhile, Nevada’s Democratic House delegation is facing a very different climate and it’s not one they’ll want to brag about.
Reps. Dina Titus, Susie Lee, and Steven Horsford are suffering through stubbornly soft approval numbers, weighed down by years of rubber-stamping the Biden agenda that left Nevadans with soaring prices, higher energy bills, and a border crisis that continues to spill into every community. Voters are noticing. Their favorability ratings have plateaued or declined across multiple public and private surveys this year, signaling widespread frustration with a delegation that seems more focused on placating the Democratic establishment than solving the problems staring Nevadans in the face.
It’s not hard to understand why. While Trump and House Republicans push forward on lowering energy costs, cutting inflation, securing the border, and undoing the Washington bloat of the last administration, Nevada’s Democrats have spent the past several years voting in lockstep with policies that made life harder and more expensive for working families. From opposing American energy expansion, to backing budgets that ballooned inflation, to refusing to take meaningful action on the border, their records read like a blueprint for voter dissatisfaction.
Trump’s continued strength underscores something the political class still hasn’t fully accepted: Republican voters are united. Democrats, especially in Nevada, are not.
As 2026 creeps into view, Titus, Lee, and Horsford will have to decide whether they want to keep marching down the same tired path or finally listen to the Nevadans who are signaling, loudly, that they’re ready for a change.
For now, the split screen couldn’t be clearer: Trump is steady. Nevada Democrats are slipping. And voters are paying attention.
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