With his poll numbers tanking due to the unpopular war in Iran and wide-ranging economic strife, experts say that President Donald Trump and the Republican Party are in danger of “significant” losses in the upcoming midterm elections.
"I've never seen the fundamentals of an election cycle as bad for an incumbent party as I am right now," said veteran Republican strategist Mike Madrid, who has spent nearly four decades analyzing elections.
Following the 2024 election, the future looked bright for the GOP. Trump had won the election by a clear plurality, Republicans controlled both houses of Congress plus the Supreme Court, and the Democrats were in disarray. But the ensuing year has proven to be nothing short of disaster, with the mishandled war and economy decimating faith in Trump — and by extension his party — even among what had previously been his most dedicated supporters.
"The public's anxiety about the economy, specifically their own financial situation, has led to a downward trend in polls for the president," said Republican strategist Matt Klink.
At the start of 2026, Trump had made soaring promises about the prosperity to come, but such growth has not arrived. Quite the opposite, with the year bringing rising unemployment, gas prices, and all-around uncertainty.
As a result, Trump’s approval rating has plummeted to historic lows, the spillover from which could mean major Republican Congressional losses. While it has been thought for months that the Democrats had a good chance of flipping the House of Representatives, it has begun to look as if the GOP could lose its majority in the Senate as well, with states long written off as Republican strongholds — like Texas, Iowa, and Ohio — now in play due to the president’s blundering performance.
When asked if Republicans had a realistic path to recovery, Republican strategist Alex Patton was not optimistic, saying, "Realistic path? Never say never, but at this point highly unlikely."
If the GOP wants to salvage the situation, he explained, Republicans would need “nearly everything to change.”
"Conservatives would need to recapture enthusiasm,” he elaborated. “Independents would need for trust to be reestablished. Inflation would need to decrease, wars and invasions would need to end, the Epstein files would need to be released, gas prices would need to decrease. I'm not sure there's enough runway to correct these trends.”
Said Peter Loge, director of George Washington University's Project on Ethics in Political Communication, “Elections are ways to fire the people in charge if voters don't like what's going on. Economic news has been bad all year and is getting worse. That's bad news for Republicans because Republicans are in charge."