Voters in this year’s election registered a level of dissatisfaction with government that hasn’t been seen in nearly 25 years. Discontent with Washington has been building for a while, and Congress in particular has been the object of public ire. And yet very few House seats are likely to change hands today.
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The NBC News national exit poll found that 78% of voters disapprove of the job Congress is doing. Before today, the highest level of disapproval of Congress ever recorded in the exit polls was in 1990, at 80%. That was just about matched again four years later in 1994 at 79% when Newt Gingrich and the Republicans took control of the House.
Views of Congress rebounded slightly in the next midterm but never reached higher than the 43% approval rating seen in 2002. Since then Congressional approval has been on a steady decline, to 37% in 2006, 23% in 2010 and now the low of 20% in today’s exit poll.
The NBC News national exit poll also found that voters don’t just disapprove of Congress; they do so with intensity. In 2006, just 29% strongly disapproved of the job Congress was doing. That climbed to 48% in 2010 and was matched in today’s exit poll.
In an age of huge partisan divides in the electorate, contempt for Congress is one thing that Democrats and Republicans agree on. Majorities of voters who identify with either party disapprove of how Congress is doing its job – 75% of Democrats and 80% of Republicans.
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