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Democrats keep doing better in elections since Trump returned to office

In this file photo, voters cast their ballots in Oak Creek, Wis., on Nov. 5, 2024. On Tuesday, Apr. 8, Wisconsin voters elected a new justice to the state's supreme court, expanding the majority for liberal leaning justices as part of a larger trend of Democratic overperformance in elections since President Trump took office.
Morry Gash
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AP
In this file photo, voters cast their ballots in Oak Creek, Wis., on Nov. 5, 2024. On Tuesday, Apr. 8, Wisconsin voters elected a new justice to the state's supreme court, expanding the majority for liberal leaning justices as part of a larger trend of Democratic overperformance in elections since President Trump took office.

After giving Republicans control of the White House and Congress in the 2024 presidential election, voters have continued to swing their support toward the Democratic Party in races held since then.

In Tuesday's elections, that shift was on display for key races in Wisconsin and Georgia, where results saw a shift of nearly 20 percentage points away from GOP margins in 2024.

Liberals on Wisconsin's Supreme Court expanded their majority to 5-2 after Chris Taylor beat conservative Maria Lazar 60% to 40%. Trump carried the state by less than a point.

Taylor's win was even larger than liberal victories in 2023 and 2025 court races, which are officially nonpartisan, that attracted national attention from figures like billionaire Elon Musk and a surge in record-setting outside spending.

Georgia's 14th congressional district, one of the most conservative in the country, saw Republican Clay Fuller win a special election runoff with 56% of the vote. Democrat Shawn Harris earned 44% after getting less than 36% against former Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene in 2024.

Trump beat former Vice President Kamala Harris in the district by nearly 40 percentage points.

Shawn Harris will likely face off against Fuller again for a full term in November's general election that also features an open governor's race and Democratic Sen. Jon Ossoff's reelection campaign.

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According to the election analysis publication The Downballot, Democrats have improved upon their 2024 presidential election margins by an average of 11% in special elections so far in 2026 and roughly 13% since the start of 2025.

The Wisconsin Supreme Court race shows increased support for Democrats is not limited to special elections, either. Commanding Democratic victories in the New Jersey and Virginia governors' races and flipped municipal races across the country continue to highlight how unpopular Republican governance in Washington is with voters.

President Trump faces a record-low job approval rating average of 39% amidst an unpopular war in Iran, rising gas prices and generally sour views on the economy.

The party in power tends to lose ground in midterm elections, and 2026 is shaping up to likely be no different. Polls show more voters say they'd prefer Democrats to control Congress and Democratic voters have higher enthusiasm for voting in the election – even as the Democratic Party is also historically unpopular.

Some of that disconnect is driven by Democratic base voters who are dissatisfied with the way their current leadership is responding to Trump's policies coupled with a recent trend of Democrats being the party most likely to show up and vote in lower-turnout special elections, primaries and non-presidential races.

For statewide primaries that have occurred so far in 2026, that Democratic enthusiasm is on display: In Texas' primary last month, a record 2.3 million votes were cast in the Democratic contest. More people voted in the Democratic statewide primary in North Carolina than the Republican one. Mississippi saw a nearly 80% increase in Democratic primary turnout since the last Senate primary in 2018.

Copyright 2026 NPR

Stephen Fowler
Stephen Fowler is a political reporter with NPR's Washington Desk and will be covering the 2024 election based in the South. Before joining NPR, he spent more than seven years at Georgia Public Broadcasting as its political reporter and host of the Battleground: Ballot Box podcast, which covered voting rights and legal fallout from the 2020 presidential election, the evolution of the Republican Party and other changes driving Georgia's growing prominence in American politics. His reporting has appeared everywhere from the Center for Public Integrity and the Columbia Journalism Review to the PBS NewsHour and ProPublica.