Pages

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Broad Backing for Tax/Benefits Deal, With Extended Benefits the Top Draw

ABC NEWS/WASHINGTON POST POLL: TAXES AND BENEFITS

I could not cut and paste the diagrams so you can click the above link to see the PDF


With decisive votes in Congress pending, Americans in a new ABC News/Washington Post poll
broadly support the tax-and-benefits deal forged by President Obama and Republican leaders of
Congress – the deficit be damned.
Sixty-nine percent support the package overall, far outnumbering the 29 percent opposed. And
even when given arguments that it’ll add as much as $900 billion to the federal budget deficit, 62
percent continue to support the measure, with opposition inching up only to 34 percent.
The package underscores both the charm and challenge of political compromise. Several of its
individual elements are sharply divisive, and on average they score better with Republicans than
with Democrats. But in combination the package appeals across the political spectrum; with
nose-holding on both sides, it gets as much support from liberals as from  from conservatives, and
nearly as much from Democrats and independents as from Republicans.

 
What it lacks, though, is passion; perhaps given its something-for-everyone nature, this poll,
produced for ABC News by Langer Research Associates, finds that just 20 percent of Americans
support the package “strongly” overall. And most of its main elements are less popular
individually than they are in combination.
While support is broad, its tepid nature in part reflects skepticism that the changes will do much
to improve the long-troubled economy. Just 36 percent think it’ll help, including only 9 percent
who think it’ll help a great deal. That leaves six in 10 who either don’t think the deal will have
much economic impact at all (43 percent), or fear it’ll make things worse (17 percent). Strong
support for the package is higher among those who think it’ll improve the economy.
THE PARTS – The deal, as noted, is more popular than the sum of its parts. Of its four chief
elements, only one – extending unemployment benefits – wins as much support individually (72
percent) as do all the elements in combination. Another, indeed, elicits majority opposition:
Perhaps given concerns about the future of Social Security, 57 percent of Americans oppose a 2
percent cut in Social Security payroll taxes.
The other two main parts of the package win majority backing, but fairly narrowly so: Fifty-four
percent support extending the Bush-era tax cuts for all Americans, including the wealthy; 52
percent favor increasing the exemption on inheritance taxes so that only estates worth more than
$5 million are taxed.3
While the package has been described chiefly as a deal on taxes, it’s notable that its most popular
element, by far, is not one of its tax provisions, but rather its extension of unemployment benefits
– a “tax-and-benefits” package may characterize it better. The Senate was to hold its first vote on
the measure today, with vote-counters suggesting it has a good chance of approval.
PARTISANS – As noted, some individual elements draw sharply partisan views. Support for
extending the Bush-era tax cuts for all Americans, including the wealthy, ranges from 85 percent
of Republicans to just 38 percent of Democrats. On the other hand Democrats are 33 points more
apt than Republicans to favor extending unemployment benefits, 88 percent vs. 55 percent.
Averaging views on each of the four main elements of the package suggests that the GOP, in this
sense, can be said to have won the better deal. Republicans favor the four items by an average of
61-37 percent; Democrats, by a closer 54-42 percent. Independents, at 52-44 percent, align more
closely with Democrats.
                                                                     % support among
                                                           Democrats   Republicans   Independents
Extending unemployment benefits                 88%          55%             73%
Extending tax cuts for all                              38              85                49
Increasing exemption on estate tax               52              60                48
Cutting Social Security payroll tax                37              42               38
Average support for items                           54              61                 52
But in a single question taking the package as whole, Democrats and independents come along,
with 68 percent support in both groups, compared with 75 percent among Republicans. A driving
force looks to be unemployment benefits, favored by nearly three-quarters of independents as
well as nearly nine in 10 Democrats.
The depth of that support also contributes: Sixty-six percent of Democrats “strongly” favor
extending benefits, the highest partisan support for any individual element of the plan. And 48
percent of independents strongly back it as well, the one element on which their views, too, are
most strongly felt.
METHODOLOGY – This ABC News/Washington Post poll was conducted by telephone Dec.
9-12, 2010, among a random national sample of 1,001 adults, including landline and cell-phoneonly respondents. Results have a margin of sampling error of 3.5 points. Click here for a detailed
description of sampling error.  This survey was produced for ABC News by Langer Research
Associates of New York, N.Y, with sampling, data collection and tabulation by TNS of
Horsham, Pa.
Analysis by Gary Langer.
ABC News polls can be found at ABCNEWS.com at http://abcnews.com/pollingunit
Media contact: Cathie Levine, (212) 456-4934





Full results follow.
1-13 Held for release.
14. For each item I name, please tell me if it’s something you support strongly,
support somewhat, oppose somewhat or oppose strongly.
12/12/10 - Summary Table
                                                    ------ Support -----   ------ Oppose ------    No
                                                    NET   Strgly   Smwht   NET   Smwht   Strgly   opin.
a. Extending the Bush-era tax
   cuts for all taxpayers,
   including wealthy people as
   well as the middle class               54       30        24        42        16          27      3
b. Funding an additional 13
    months of unemployment
   benefits for people who are
   out of work                                72      49         23       26         11         14       2
c. Cutting Social Security
    payroll taxes by two
    percentage points for all
    workers for the next year            39      18         21       57          18       39       3
d. Increasing the exemption on
    inheritance taxes so that only
    estates worth more than five
    million dollars are taxed              52      29          23       41         16       25       7
15. Obama and the Republican leaders of Congress have reached an agreement to do all
     four of these things together as a package. Is this plan something you support
    strongly, support somewhat, oppose somewhat or oppose strongly?
                        -------- Support --------   --------- Oppose --------     No
                       NET   Strongly   Somewhat   NET   Somewhat   Strongly   opinion
12/12/10          69       20              49            29             17           12                2
16. Some people oppose this agreement because it will increase the federal deficit by
900 billion dollars, and some also say it fails to raise taxes on wealthy people who
can afford it. Others say it’s worth it in order to let people have more money to
spend while the economy is still weak. Given these arguments, is this agreement
something you support strongly, support somewhat, oppose somewhat or oppose strongly?
                       -------- Support --------   --------- Oppose --------     No
                        NET   Strongly   Somewhat   NET   Somewhat   Strongly   opinion
12/12/10           62       17            45             34           20              14             4
17. Over the next year or two, do you think this agreement will help the national
economy, hurt the national economy or won’t make much difference? (IF HELPED/HURT) Is
that a great deal or somewhat?
                     ----------- Help ----------   ---------- Hurt -----------        No       No
                NET   Great deal   Somewhat   NET   Somewhat   Great deal   diff.   opinion
12/12/10   36          9                   27         17            9                  8             43        3
Compare to: Thinking about the federal government's economic stimulus program, do you
think the economic stimulus program has (helped) the national economy, (hurt) the
national economy, or hasn't made much difference? (IF HELPED/HURT) Is that a great
deal or somewhat?5
                   ---------- Helped ---------   ---------- Hurt -----------             No       No
                    NET   Great deal   Somewhat   NET   Somewhat   Great deal   diff.   opinion
6/6/10            30         9                  21           20           7                13          49        1
11/15/09        37        12                 25           23           6                17          39        1
9/12/09          32        10                 22           19           5                13          47        2
6/21/09          28         8                  20           19           6                13          52        2
4/24/09          33        10                 23           16           6                10          49        2
18–39 Held for release.

No comments:

Post a Comment