Nearly 60% of Voters Say Economic, Political Systems Work Against Them, Poll Shows
An NBC News poll found nearly 6 in 10 voters believe economic and political systems are stacked against people like them, matching a record high.

Nearly 60 percent of American voters believe the country's economic and political systems are stacked against people like them, according to new NBC News polling data that ties a record high spanning roughly four decades of national surveys.
The finding reflects widespread sentiment among voters that existing systems do not serve their interests, marking a significant measure of public dissatisfaction with current institutional arrangements.
The polling result matches the highest level of such sentiment recorded in NBC News national polling over approximately 40 years of tracking this metric. The data suggests sustained public skepticism about whether economic and political institutions operate fairly for ordinary Americans.
This level of discontent cuts across demographic and political lines, indicating broad-based concerns about systemic fairness rather than partisan-specific grievances. The polling captures voter attitudes during a period of ongoing economic uncertainty and political polarization.
The survey results provide insight into public sentiment that could influence voting patterns and policy preferences as Americans evaluate their relationship with major institutions and systems of governance.