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Fewer voters choose health care (10%) or immigration (4%) as the most important issue in deciding their vote for president. The latest KFF Health Tracking Poll finds a shift in the public’s attitudes on the coronavirus outbreak. The latest KFF Health Tracking Poll finds 5% of Republican voters offering responses related to opposing or getting rid of the ACA as a top health care issue (compared to 29% of Republican voters who said the same prior to the 2016 presidential election). Majorities of voters ages 65 and older say they are more likely to vote for a candidate who supports the Medicare provisions in the Inflation Reduction Act, though fewer say the same about a candidate who supports clean energy investment, the extending ACA subsides, or cancelling some student loans. Notably, student loan cancellation appears to be particularly polarizing with four in ten voters (40%) saying they are more likely to vote for a candidate who supports cancelling some federal student loan debt for most borrowers who make under $125,000 while a similar share (38%) say they would be less likely to vote for a candidate who supports this. The economy is overwhelmingly the top issue for Republican voters with more than half (53%) choosing it as the most important issue in making their decision about who to vote for president, and it is also the top issue for independent voters (29%). Nearly four in ten Democratic voters (36%) say the coronavirus outbreak is the top issue in deciding their vote, followed by race relations (27%). Few Republican voters say the coronavirus outbreak (4%) or race relations (2%) is their top issue in the election.
The economy has now secured a spot as the top issue in the 2020 election with one-third of registered voters (32%) saying it will be the most important issue in deciding their vote for president, followed by the coronavirus outbreak (20%), criminal justice and policing (16%), and race relations (14%). There is a strong partisan divide, with Republican voters prioritizing the economy followed by criminal justice and policing, and Democratic voters prioritizing coronavirus followed by race relations. A majority of voters have already decided who they plan on voting for in the 2020 presidential election with more than one-third of voters (35%) saying they are "definitely going to vote for President Trump" and four in ten (38%) saying they are "definitely going to vote for Joe Biden." Yet, there is a crucial group of voters, "swing voters," who have not made up their minds yet. This shift is notable among all white voters with now similar shares of white voters saying that violence caused by protestors (56%) and racism (53%) are each a "big problem" in the U.S. While a large majority of Democratic voters and six in ten independent voters continue to say racism is "big problem" in the U.S.
About six in ten (58%) say racism is a "big problem" while about four in ten say the same about police violence against the public (43%). Over the past three months, there has been a 15 percentage point increase in the share of voters who say violence caused by protestors is a "big problem," 52% compared to 37% in June. The partisan divisions in perceptions of these problems, especially views about the violence caused by protestors, have also shifted since June. Though a majority of Republican voters (70%) approve of the Supreme Court’s decision overturning Roe v. Wade, majorities across partisan voters - including most Republicans - are opposed to laws prohibiting abortion even in cases of rape or incest, laws making it a crime for women to get an abortion that would result in either fines or prison, and laws allowing private citizens to sue people who provide or assist women in getting abortions. At least six in ten independent voters say they are more likely to vote for candidates who support these Medicare prescription drug provisions, though these policies are less popular among Republican voters. At least six in ten Democratic voters say they are more likely to vote for a candidate who supports each of the policies asked about, with the policies aimed at addressing prescription drug costs for people with Medicare being among the most popular.
Similar to overall voters who say they are motivated by the Dobbs decision, women voters 18 to 49 who are now more motivated to vote also are more likely to vote for candidates who support abortion access. The share of voters who say health care will be the most important issue in deciding their vote has dropped 16 percentage points since February (from 26% to 10%), and outside of coronavirus, health care now ranks 5th as an issue for voters (and ranks 3rd for Democrats). On the other hand, student loan cancellation may resonate among younger voters as those ages 18 to 29 are more than twice as likely as voters over 65 to say they are more likely to vote for a candidate who supports cancelling some student loans. In addition, he announced student loan debt forgiveness for many adults in the U.S. In addition, large majorities of voters view racism, police violence, and violence caused by protestors as at least "somewhat of a problem" in the U.S. Figure 5: Majorities Say Racism, Violent Protests, And Police Violence Are Problems In The U.S. But the latest KFF poll finds voters’ priorities have shifted during the last six months with the coronavirus outbreak, the closing of businesses due to the spread of the virus and subsequent recession, the police shootings of unarmed Black Americans, 비트겟수수료 and violence occurring around protests.
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