POLITICS

Survey Finds Proposals Favored by Bipartisan Supermajorities

January 20, 2021 15:46, Last Updated: January 20, 2021 18:16
By Mark Tapscott

Americans are deeply divided on many major issues facing the country, although a new national survey finds six big proposals are favored by super-majorities in both political parties.

“The research clearly shows that these are the policies that an overwhelming number of Americans, regardless of political party, want,” George Barna, director of the Cultural Research Center (CRC) at Arizona Christian University, said in a statement accompanying the release of the survey.

“There is a clear path to unity and healing in these common-ground issues.”

The survey interviewed a demographically balanced sample of 1,000 adults immediately following the Nov. 3, 2020, election. The margin of error for the survey is 3 percentage points.

The six issues that attracted the support of at least two-thirds of respondents who identified as Republicans and Democrats included the following:

Another four issues gained majority support from respondents in both parties, but not quite supermajorities:

At the other end of the results, repealing the U.S. Supreme Court’s 1973 Roe v. Wade decision that legalized abortion received support from just 50 percent of Trump voters and 38 percent of Biden supporters.

Similarly, increasing the number of members of the high court, as advocated by many liberal Democrats, only generated support overall from 47 percent of the respondents, although 61 percent of Biden voters liked the proposal.

In a separate statement, CRC said its survey results reflect an emerging trend in American public opinion, in which respondents often express support for conflicting policies.

“The research shows that the people want an active government—one that will take action and get things done in a variety of life dimensions (education, economics, government process, etc.),” it said.

“Yet, government action never happens in a vacuum: Changes in the law and public policy always come at a cost. The implications of many of the desired changes identified by the survey respondents [are] that those actions will conflict with some of their expressed desires, such as having fewer government regulations, the elimination of federal government debt, a balanced budget for the feds, and lower personal income tax rates.”

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