OVERVIEW KEY FINDINGS. March 2017

Similar documents
Does My Vote Matter?

Working-Class Latinos in Orlando More Motivated to Vote Because of Trump

VOTERS AND HEALTH CARE IN THE 2018 CONGRESSIONAL ELECTION

FINAL RESULTS: National Voter Survey Total Sample Size: 2428, Margin of Error: ±2.0% Interview Dates: November 1-4, 2018

YG Network Congressional District Poll: December Topline Results

Fissures Emerge in Ohio s Reliably Republican CD-12

Public Opinion on Health Care Issues October 2012

CSR Update Report August 18, 2017

AARP Maine Member Survey on the Health Care Reform Plan in the House of Representatives..

AARP Minnesota Member Survey on the Health Care Reform Plan in the House of Representatives..

Public Opinion on Health Care Issues March 2012

WHERE TRUMP, PENCE, AND PORTMAN STAND ON ISSUES THAT IMPACT WORKING FAMILIES TRUMP, PENCE & PORTMAN ON WORKING FAMILIES ISSUES

AMERICANS VIEWS OF PRESIDENT TRUMP S AGENDA ON HEALTH CARE, IMMIGRATION, AND INFRASTRUCTURE

Unique Front Porch Focus Group Explores the Appeal of Trump s Right-Wing Message with White Working-Class Voters

Public Opinion on Health Care Issues October 2010

MEMORANDUM. Independent Voter Preferences

Civitas Institute North Carolina Statewide Poll Results November 17 19, 2018

Tennessee voters disapprove of the Republican efforts to repeal the Affordable Care Act by 10 points (47% to 37%).

The Public s Health Care Agenda for the 112th Congress

Pennsylvania voters disapprove of the Republican efforts to repeal the Affordable Care Act by 17 points (52% to 35%).

The 2014 Election in Aiken County: Popularity of Six Key Provisions in the Affordable Care Act

2016 Texas Lyceum Poll

The Rising American Electorate & White Working Class Strike Back: Extended memo from post-election research

Change versus more of the same: On-going panel of target voting groups provides path for Democrats in 2018

Battleground 59: A (Potentially) Wasted Opportunity for the Republican Party Republican Analysis by: Ed Goeas and Brian Nienaber

The Future of Health Care after Repeal and Replace is Pulled: Millennials Speak Out about Health Care

NATIONAL HEALTH CARE VOTER SURVEY

Wisconsin voters disapprove of the Republican efforts to repeal the Affordable Care Act by 20 points (55% to 35%).

OHIO: CLINTON HOLDS SMALL EDGE; PORTMAN LEADS FOR SENATE

Election 2016 Predictions and Impact

Unique web panel shows how RAE really delivered December, 2018

Ohio 2018 Late October Elections Poll

A strong majority of voters of all major parties say that they are less likely to vote for a politician who supports partisan gerrymandering.

2018 at a breaking point? Impressive gains among base and persuasion targets, and potential for more

Nevada Poll Results Tarkanian 39%, Heller 31% (31% undecided) 31% would renominate Heller (51% want someone else, 18% undecided)

Public Opinion about the Future of the Affordable Care Act

What s Driving Voter Opinion in the Twin Cities Metro?

Public Opinion on Health Care Issues

An in-depth examination of North Carolina voter attitudes in important current issues. Registered Voters in North Carolina

SURVEY KEY FINDINGS. Require RPS of 20 percent by 2020

Health Care Reform: The Sequel

Who Is End Citizens United?

PRRI/The Atlantic 2016 Post- election White Working Class Survey Total = 1,162 (540 Landline, 622 Cell phone) November 9 20, 2016

September Tax Reform Research

American Politics and Foreign Policy

Executive Summary of Texans Attitudes toward Immigrants, Immigration, Border Security, Trump s Policy Proposals, and the Political Environment

Health Care in the 2016 Election A View through Voters Polarized Lenses

America s Voice/LD 2016 National and Battleground State Poll (Field Dates August 19-30)

WORTH PURSUING? AN ANALYSIS INTO THE RELEVANCE OF THE NEWSPAPER ENDORSEMENT. Sarah Kellogg. Mark Horvit, Project Supervisor ANALYSIS

THE PUBLIC AND THE CRITICAL ISSUES BEFORE CONGRESS IN THE SUMMER AND FALL OF 2017

Energy Issues & North Carolina Voters. March 14 th, 2017

THE 2004 NATIONAL SURVEY OF LATINOS: POLITICS AND CIVIC PARTICIPATION

New message platform for 2018 s key battlegrounds Findings from Wave 1 of Battleground web-panel & phone survey. May 2018

WEEKLY LATINO TRACKING POLL 2018: WAVE 1 9/05/18

Respondents: Likely 2020 Democratic Primary Voters/Caucusers Nationwide with 250 oversample for African Americans, and 300 oversample for Latinos.

Voters in Black and White Working-Class Neighborhoods: Finding a Common Agenda

The Public s Health Care Agenda for the New Congress and Presidential Campaign

Voters back hospitals bid to expand Medicaid; reject religious freedom case not to serve gays; gun control moves voters in swing state Virginia

An Update on ACA Repeal and Replace Efforts

Survey of US Voters Candidate Smith June 2014

NATIONAL: LOW PUBLIC CONFIDENCE IN AMERICAN SYSTEM

2. When general elections are held in the United States, how often do you vote? Would you say

Clinton Maintains 3% Lead in Michigan (Clinton 47% - Trump 44% - Johnson 4% - Stein 1%)

Council President James A. Klein s memo to members: policy priorities will need to overcome partisan conflict

Speaking to Americans about Immigration and American Values

Focus on OUR Concerns

Intersection between Policy and Politics

1. a person who wants to be elected to a certain position. The candidates for mayor will speak on TV tonight.

PPIC Statewide Survey: Special Survey on Campaign Ethics

Clinton Lead Cut in Half from August (Clinton 47% - Trump 42% in 2-way and Clinton 45% - Trump 39% in 4-way)

PHYSICIANS AS CANDIDATES PROGRAM

RECOMMENDED CITATION: Pew Research Center, July, 2016, 2016 Campaign: Strong Interest, Widespread Dissatisfaction

RE: Less Spending and More Government: the Conflicting Views of Voters Under 40

Revolt against Congress: Game On Survey of the Battleground House Districts

Hispanic Voter Snapshot June 2017

ACA Roundtable. Western Pension & Benefits Council, Seattle Chapter. March 21, 2017

2016 GOP Nominating Contest

2:12 Blair Miller -- Denver7: What concerns have you brought to the table in those working groups?

Unite for Behavioral Health Biweekly Advocacy Webinar Series Webinar #14

University of North Florida Public Opinion Research Lab

New message platform for 2018 s key battlegrounds Report from phone survey & web-panel in the 12-state battleground

Californians. their government. ppic statewide survey DECEMBER in collaboration with The James Irvine Foundation CONTENTS

Center for American Progress Action Fund Survey of the Florida Puerto Rican Electorate

SouthCarolinaElection IssuesSurvey

Executive Summary of Economic Attitudes, Most Important Problems, Ratings of Top Political Figures, and an Early Look at the 2018 Texas Elections

Clinton Leads by 13% in Michigan before Last Debate (Clinton 51% - Trump 38%- Johnson 6% - Stein 2%)

WEEKLY LATINO TRACKING POLL 2018: WAVE 8 10/23/18

NEWS RELEASE. Poll Shows Tight Races Obama Leads Clinton. Democratic Primary Election Vote Intention for Obama & Clinton

Healthcare and the 2012 Election. October 17 th, 2012

INDIANA: PREZ CONTEST TIGHTENS; BAYH MAINTAINS SENATE EDGE

The Battleground: Democratic Perspective April 25 th, 2016

University of North Florida Public Opinion Research Lab

ENERGY & VOTERS Poll Briefing Luncheon

ACA REPLACEMENT BILL WITHDRAWN

A National Survey of Voter Attitudes January 14-17, 2019

From: John Halpin, Center for American Progress Karl Agne, GBA Strategies

THE WORKMEN S CIRCLE SURVEY OF AMERICAN JEWS. Jews, Economic Justice & the Vote in Steven M. Cohen and Samuel Abrams

2002 United States Senate Runoff Survey

Public Charge 101 October 17, 2018

1. Do you approve or disapprove of the job Barack Obama is doing as president? Apr 09 62% 29 8 Democrats 87% 8 5

Transcription:

March 2017 Working-Class Voters Reject ACA Repeal, Are Less Likely to Support Politicians Who Vote for It More than 350 face-to-face conversations with working-class Ohioans reveal that 55 percent think GOP plan to repeal Affordable Care Act would hurt nation OVERVIEW With lawmakers in Washington considering a quick repeal of the Affordable Care Act, Working America went into the field to talk with working-class voters about the ACA. We visited five central Ohio communities and had front-porch conversations with Clinton, Trump and third-party voters to get their thoughts about health care generally and the prospect of ACA repeal. ACA repeal has become a pressing concern for working-class voters a shift from before the 2016 election, when jobs and the economy were by far the dominant issues. Now that repeal is a real possibility, working people seem very concerned about the future of the ACA. We found that voters from across the political spectrum are wary of repeal. And yet there is still a significant lack of knowledge about the ACA, what its repeal might mean and what politicians positions are on the law. At a time when the ACA has been roiling town halls and the halls of Congress, we surveyed people about various aspects of the law and got intriguing responses. From Feb. 10 to Feb. 16, we canvassed 364 registered voters, 96 percent of them from households making $75,000 or less a year. Forty-three percent identified themselves as having voted for Hillary Clinton in November, 26 percent said they voted for Donald Trump, 16 percent wouldn t share their presidential choice, 5 percent said they voted for a third-party candidate, and 10 percent said they didn t vote. Among all respondents, 17 percent said they or someone in their family had gotten health insurance through the ACA. The vast majority of people we interviewed were white (86 percent); 12 percent were African American and 2 percent were Latinx. A summary of our findings appears below. KEY FINDINGS An overwhelming majority opposes ACA repeal before replacement. Overall, 87 percent of those we spoke with, including 79 percent of Trump voters, oppose repealing the ACA before a replacement is in place. Most believe ACA repeal would have a negative effect on the country. More than half of those interviewed (55 percent) believe the GOP s plan to repeal and replace the ACA would hurt America. The partisan divide is sharp: 86 percent of Clinton voters believe the impact would be negative, while 71 percent of Trump voters think repeal would be positive. Among the small sample with ACA coverage, a solid majority report a positive experience with their plan. Among people we spoke with who have gotten insurance through the ACA or know a

family member who has, 62 percent say they feel positively about the plan. Clinton and Trump voters both believe the No. 1 way to improve the ACA is to make it less expensive. Overall, 39 percent of Trump voters and 36 percent of Clinton voters say if Congress could make just one ACA fix, it should make plans cheaper or increase subsidies. Many voters still lack basic information about the ACA. Among all respondents, 76 percent didn t know the stance of either of Ohio s senators on the ACA; 77 percent didn t know that repeal could eliminate a provision in the ACA that reduces prescription drug costs for Medicare recipients in the coverage gap known as the donut hole. The Real ACA Experience Across America, people have all sorts of opinions about the Affordable Care Act. President Trump has called it a total disaster, while Democrats maintain that the ACA has brought quality health care to millions. We tested these claims by going directly to the homes of working-class Ohioans and asking about their experience with the ACA. Overall, 17 percent said they or someone in their family had received health insurance through the ACA. Our canvassers asked people who had enrolled in marketplace coverage how they feel about it, and 62 percent report having a positive experience. Here is a sample of their comments: Kenny, a white voter in his early 30s from Westerville, is raising his special-needs son on his own. All of his son s doctors are covered by his ACA plan. The ACA was much needed, Kenny says, and he worries how repeal would impact his son. Why is this a partisan issue when it is supposed to benefit all of us? he asks. Judith, 75, from Gahanna, says her sister-in-law s monthly prescription costs have dropped from $475 to $40 because of the ACA. She tells anyone who will listen that her family has benefited greatly from the law. Ariel, a 24-year-old from Westerville, says he has been able to stay on his father s insurance plan because of the ACA, and he thinks the law should go even further. Germany has had some sort of universal health care since the 1800s, he says. Of course, not everyone is satisfied with their ACA coverage; 25 percent of people with ACA coverage in their family told us they ve had a negative experience. Here are some of their thoughts: Robert, 53, a white voter from Grove City, hates his ACA coverage and doesn t feel it s affordable at all. He says he has a $7,000 deductible and is afraid to go to the doctor. He plans to drop his coverage and pay the fine. Although he blames insurance companies for the law s problems they re the real fat cats he feels the ACA should be repealed. Trump voters Philip, 51, and Marie, 50, a husband and wife from Reynoldsburg, say their insurance is crap. Since the ACA passed, they have a higher deductible, higher co-pays and higher costs in general, they say. In addition, Marie believes her health care spending is helping to pay for abortions. She and Philip favor immediate repeal of the ACA and don t care about a replacement. While the ACA stirs strong feelings in some, the majority of working-class voters we talked to do not have a lot of information about the 2010 law and say their health coverage has not been impacted since its passage. Overall, 71 percent say the ACA has had no impact on their health insurance plan.

Even a majority of Trump voters (53 percent) say the ACA has not affected their health plan, suggesting a need for widespread education. Strong Feelings on Repeal and Health Care Access Except for the most ardent ACA opponents, most working-class voters we canvassed believe Americans should have access to affordable health care. Don t pull the rug out from under people is a common refrain we heard on the doors, and many people feel strongly about the issue: 1 in 4 voters say they are willing to take action to prevent ACA repeal. Overall, 87 percent of working-class voters say the ACA should not be repealed before it s replaced. Here is what they re saying: Front Porch Fact: People Want Politicians to Expand Health Care Access A strong majority wants elected officials to make health care more efficient and accessible. Of the working-class voters we talked to, 88 percent (including 76 percent of Trump voters) say they want politicians to create policies that make health care coverage more efficient and accessible for everyone. Repeal would leave people like me with nothing, says Sonja, 32, a mother of two and a Clinton voter from Westerville who has had insurance through the marketplace for a few years. Pamela, a white 56-year-old from Gahanna, had an uncle who was denied insurance due to a preexisting condition. This was before the ACA was enacted. When told he d need to go on dialysis, he killed himself rather than bankrupt the family, she says, adding that now, thanks to the ACA, people are not driven to such extremes. Don t Repeal Before Replacing Despite the widespread reticence about repeal, 13 percent of the 254 voters who addressed this topic in our survey do support repealing the ACA before replacing it.

Among the minority willing to pass repeal without a replacement, this was a representative comment: Sean, 31, from Reynoldsburg, thinks poor folks shouldn t be draining the system and should get jobs instead. His employer doesn t offer health insurance, he says, so he pays the fine to avoid spending $300 a month on an ACA plan. He favors immediate repeal. Nevertheless, among most people we talked to, there was real unease that many Americans might lose health care if conservatives undo the law. Many people with reservations about the ACA, including some who strongly favor repeal, expressed concerns that good aspects of the ACA could be lost. Ashley, 32, a Trump voter from Westerville, was unhappy when a caseworker tried to steer her to Medicaid. I wanted to pay for my own health care, she says. She doesn t think hardworking people should foot the bill for Obamacare. But she also opposes repeal without replacement because she doesn t want to see people lose health care. Amy, 57, a Trump voter from Powell, says ACA coverage is no good. Prescriptions are so expensive. But she likes the ACA s policy on pre-existing conditions and would like to see that kept. Little Information and Lots of Confusion Years of misleading messages have led to widespread misinformation and confusion about the ACA in working-class communities. The voters we surveyed often seemed unclear about the difference between Medicaid coverage and health insurance purchased through the ACA marketplace. Even people on the plans were sometimes confused about which coverage they had. This confusion and lack of information help explain some of the choices voters made in the 2016 election:

Lisa, 46, is from Gahanna and didn t have insurance before the ACA. She found the website easy to use, got coverage and has had a relatively positive experience. Nevertheless, Lisa says she s not familiar enough with the ACA to know if it needs fixing. In 2016, she voted for Donald Trump. I m just hoping for the best, she says. The lack of information about the ACA even among people benefiting from the law shows that progressives have much work to do to educate voters about how it has improved health care and which politicians are working to roll it back. Even in Ohio, which was flooded with political advertising in 2016, few working-class voters could identify their elected officials stance on the ACA. Overall, 76 percent of Ohioans we talked to did not know either of their senators positions on the ACA. Even though Sen. Rob Portman was on the ballot in November, only 19 percent of voters could correctly state that he favors repeal. When voters are educated about a politician s position on the ACA, it should benefit progressives. Overall, 55 percent of working-class voters we surveyed think ACA repeal would have a negative impact on America. At door after door, we heard people calling for ACA fixes rather than repeal, even among voters unhappy with the law: Kathryn, a white voter in her early 30s from Westerville, was billed for an extra two months after dropping ACA coverage she disliked. Nevertheless, she s angry that instead of trying to fix the problem, the Republicans waste time trying to repeal it. Why can t our elected officials work to help us instead of fighting each other? Carol, 71, a white Clinton voter from Gahanna, worries that her daughter s ACA premiums are too expensive. According to Carol, When they say it s affordable, it s misleading. Still, her daughter likes her health care plan, and Carol believe that everyone should have health care. Front-Porch Fact: A Political Price for Repeal? Voters say they d be less likely to support a politician who voted for repeal. In our canvassing, 46 percent of voters said they d be less inclined to vote for a member of Congress who backed repeal, while 15 percent said a pro-repeal stance would make them more inclined to back a candidate. Narrowing to just those people who have received ACA coverage, we see a far more intense backlash against elected officials who support taking away coverage. A full 64 percent of those covered by ACA said they would be less supportive of such a politician, compared with 4 percent who would be more supportive. Even 18 percent of Trump voters said they would be less inclined to back politicians who repeal coverage. This level of intensity is an ominous sign for lawmakers who must face these disgruntled constituents in 2018. METHODOLOGY Unlike traditional public opinion polling, which is based on a random sample of people representative of a given population, we targeted working-class neighborhoods in five central Ohio communities. Ninetysix percent of the people we spoke with were from households making $75,000 or less a year, and 17 percent said they or someone in their family had gotten health insurance through the Affordable Care Act. Our sample is not representative. From Feb. 10 to Feb. 16, we canvassed 364 registered voters. Their voting preferences in the 2016 election broke down as follows: 43 percent said they voted for Hillary Clinton, 26 percent said they

voted for Donald Trump, 16 percent didn t share their presidential choice, 5 percent said they voted for a third-party candidate, and 10 percent said they did not vote. As far as a demographic breakdown, the canvassed population skewed female (56 percent), and the vast majority of respondents were white (86 percent), with African Americans at 12 percent and Latinxs at 2 percent. The predominant age groups were people in their 30s (25 percent) and 50s (23 percent). Among white respondents, 18 percent said they or someone in their family had gotten health insurance through the ACA; 21 percent of African Americans reported ACA coverage, and 0 percent of Latinxs reported ACA coverage. Canvassers sought to gauge how much people knew and how they were feeling about the Affordable Care Act as well as their opinions on its possible repeal. Individuals could choose not to answer a specific question, which resulted in slightly different totals for each response. The five Ohio towns where we canvassed were Westerville, Reynoldsburg, Powell, Gahanna and Grove City.

Working America Community Affiliate of the AFL-CIO 815 16 th Street NW Washington, DC 20006 WorkingAmerica.org 2017 Working America