The numbers are in, and the viewership of the Democratic National Convention blew last month’s Republican National Convention out of the water.
Early numbers by Nielsen Fast Nationals indicate that the final night of the DNC garnered 26.20 million viewers across 15 networks, compared to night four of the 2024 RNC Night 4 at 25.4 million viewers.
The DNC drew in more viewers across 12 different cable and broadcasting news networks all four nights of the convention. 20 million on Monday, 20.6 million viewers on Tuesday, 20.2 million on Wednesday, and the estimated 26.20 on Thursday.
By contrast, the RNC drew in 18.1 million, 14.8 million, 18 million, and 25.4 million viewers on each of its respective four nights.
These numbers don’t even factor in the hundreds of thousands who viewed the convention on independent streaming services like YouTube, Twitch, and other social media platforms.
During Vice President Kamala Harris’s nomination speech on Thursday her opponent, former President Donald Trump, spiraled into a multi-platform meltdown that continued into Friday.
One factor driving the former president’s unraveling might be his concerns that more people are paying more attention to Harris than to him. As previously reported by Rolling Stone, days before the convention even began, Trump was badgering his media and political allies for reassurance that the DNC would have fewer viewers than his own convention.
From ratings to crowd sizes, the former reality TV star has harbored a longtime obsession with quantifying how much people like him — a fixation that Democrats made a point to poke fun of during the convention.
On Tuesday, Former President Barack Obama — who Trump famously, and falsely, claimed had a smaller inauguration crowd than him — mocked his successor’s obsession with size as a sign he was that he was compensating for … other deficiencies. The viewership of the DNC isn’t the only metric through which Harris is trouncing Trump. According to July’s fundraising numbers, the Harris campaign more than quadrupled the former president’s cash haul last month — a staggering $204 million compared to Trump’s $48 million.