Publication Date: 06/10/2026 2:48 PM CST
NNS Post Type Icon

Why 45% Say Incumbents Can't Lose

Publication: 06/10/2026 2:48 PM CST

Member Content

Watermark

The content you are trying to access is currently only available to Gold Circle Members. If you are a member, please log in to view.

To learn more about becoming a Gold Circle Member, please refer to our membership page.


Full Toplines: RESTRICTED
Full Crosstabs URL: RESTRICTED


Toplines are free for use after embargo, if any. Crosstabs are confidential and not for public release. However, you may cite specific demographic data from these reports.
For any data released, please cite Napolitan News Service.


Public Content

  • Voters offer several reasons for how 94% of incumbents get re-elected when Congress is so unpopular.
    • About one quarter (23%) say it's because of voter behavior, saying voters are apathetic or don't research and tend to vote along party lines.
    • Fourteen percent (14%) say incumbents get re-elected because voters have no other viable options, and they choose the "lesser of two evils."
    • Some say systemic barriers deter new candidates.
    • Twelve percent (12%) point to systemic corruption, and say there is election fraud, bribery, and influence from wealthy donors.
    • Another 11% said incumbent's have advantages, like superior name recognition and the ability to raise more campaign funds than challengers.
  • A plurality (45%) of registered voters say members of Congress almost always get re-elected because gerrymandering and other election laws make it just about impossible for a member of Congress to lose.
      • About a third (36%) say 94% of incumbents get re-elected because people hate Congress but love their own representative in Congress.
      • Nineteen percent (19%) are not sure.
      • By a 55% to 33% margin, Democrats say gerrymandering and other laws make it impossible to lose.
      • Republicans are more split, with 42% saying people hate Congress but love their representative, while 37% say it's gerrymandering and other laws.


This data is from a Napolitan News Service survey of 1,000 Registered Voters conducted online by Scott Rasmussen, June 8-9, 2026. RMG Research, Inc., conducted the field work for the survey. It has a margin of error of +/- 3.1.


Classifications
Post Type: NNS Poll Result
Post Tags: US Congress

Supporting Documents