Poll: Voters Still Trust GOP More on Spending, Jobs, Healthcare

March 22, 2011 RSS Feed Print
  • Comment (7)

Pollster Scott Rasmussen released numbers Monday showing that voters still trust the GOP to better handle most of the critical issues facing the country.

It’s somewhat astounding, given the way the information coming out of Washington has almost uniformly presented the Republicans as the “black hats” and the Democrats as the “white ones,” especially when it comes to cutting special interest spending—not to mention the negative press the national GOP got as a result of Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker’s battle with the public employee unions.

[Read the U.S. News debate: Should public employees keep collective bargaining rights?]

In the latest Rasmussen survey, 47 percent of likely voters said they trusted the Republicans more to handle the issue that is routinely identified as being most important to them—the economy—than they trusted the Democrats. And 46 percent of likely voters said they trusted the GOP more on healthcare, suggesting the House Republicans are on the right track in their efforts to repeal Obama’s healthcare package—and to limit the funding for it on their way to total repeal—while Senate Democrats are more likely to be seen as standing the way of what the voters want.

“Early last month,” Rasmussen said, “the issue of education jumped in importance,” and now 42 percent of voters—perhaps having all seen the documentary Waiting for Superman—“trust the GOP to handle this issue.” [Check out a roundup of political cartoons on Democrats.]

Republicans also continue to be seen—by five points—as more ethical and better able to fight government corruption, and they have a 48 percent to 37 percent lead over the Democrats when “it comes to trust on taxes.”

In the one place where the GOP does not have a clear lead—the issue of Social Security, once the third rail of American politics—the voters trust both parties evenly. “In early January,” Rasmussen said, “the GOP held a 10-point advantage over the Democrats on this issue,” meaning something has happened to undermine the voters’ trust of the GOP. [See a roundup of political cartoons on the budget and deficit.]

The GOP continues to lead the Democrats—and the White House—on its handling of immigration and on various critical national security issues like the War on Terror and Iraq and Afghanistan.

The data was compiled from two surveys of 1,000 likely U.S. voters conducted between March 10-11 and March 14-15, with a margin of sampling error of +/- 3 percentage points at a 95 percent level of confidence.

Tags:
Democratic Party,
Rasmussen Report,
immigration reform,
politics,
deficit and national debt,
national security terrorism and the military,
healthcare reform,
polls,
unemployment,
White House,
Republican Party

Reader Comments Read all comments (7)

Add Your Thoughts
Your comment will be posted immediately, unless it is spam or contains profanity. For more information, please see our Comments FAQ.

Peter - I have no problems with the Right, except they often do not offer data from a variety of sources. We can all go out and look for polls and speakers who affirm our point of view. But in the end - divere sources give a broad spectrum of information that can then be evaluated.

Rassmussen ony polls land line phones, uses automated calls, and uses traditional "push-poll" techniques in formulating questions. Lots of articles on this - showing Rassmussen as the least objective and precise.

Example - a question asking someone if they dislike "Obamacare" is more likely to fetch a negative response, than if someone asks if they like having no insurers able to disqualify based on pre-existing conditions. I know many folks who already are pleased with those things now in effect.

The "Armageddon" promised by the GOP/TP in the healthcare world haas proven to be hysteria - and we are all just fine, and many are now actually better than before. Leading by hysteria is cynical and fixes nothing. Using Rassmussen as your sole barometer of opinion is also narrow - not including cell phone users and many other methods of polling that would count voices that are less conservatively oriented.

But it is definitely your MO Peter. The public is getting the message too. Not wrong to have a bias - we all do. It is wrong though to represent it as balanced considering all perspectives....

DeeToo of SC 9:33AM March 25, 2011

I find this article hard to believe...especially given the recent events in States with new GOP Govenors.

Cynthia of IL 2:13PM March 23, 2011

So now I'm trusting Republicans more on these issues? Since when? And why?

jheiens in OH of OH 1:19PM March 23, 2011

Peter Roff

Peter Roff

Peter Roff is a contributing editor at U.S. News & World Report. Formerly a senior political writer for United Press International, he’s now affiliated with several public policy organizations including Let Freedom Ring, and Frontiers of Freedom. His writing has appeared in National Review, Fox News’ opinion section, The Daily Caller, Politico and elsewhere. Follow him on Twitter @PeterRoff.

advertisement

Robert Schlesinger

An End to the NRA’s Angry Swagger

Polls show that overwhelming majorities of Americans, and even of NRA members, favor universal background checks.

Mary Kate Cary

Washington’s Toxic Stew

President Obama's burgeoning problems affect more than this week’s three scandals.

Latest Videos

advertisement