New York Post

DREAM DEFERRED

Just 36% of voters still believe in the American promise

- By JOSH CHRISTENSO­N

Just a little more than a third of US voters believe the American dream, which holds that those who work hard can get ahead regardless of background, is still possible, according to a new poll.

A Wall Street Journal/NORC survey from October found 36% of voters said the American dream “still holds true,” 45% said it was “once true but not now” and 18% said it “never held true.”

Half of American voters also believe life is worse in the US than it was a half-century ago, while 30% disagreed and said it had improved over that time period, the poll shows.

Similarly, half of respondent­s agreed with the statement that America’s economic and political system is “stacked against people like me,” compared with 39% who disagreed with that statement.

The sentiment cuts across partisan lines, with both Democrats and Republican­s mentioning life being “objectivel­y worse” and the American dream being “past tense,” according to voters who spoke with the Journal.

“We have a nice house in the suburbs, and we have a two-car garage,” Oakley Graham, a 30year-old, stay-at-home father from Greenwood, Mo., who voted for President Biden, told the outlet. “But I’d be lying if I didn’t say that money was tight.

“No matter how good it looks on the outside, I feel we are all a couple of paychecks away from being on the street,” he added, blaming in part the decline of strong US labor unions.

Meanwhile, John Lasher, a 78year-old retired electrical inspector for aircraft carriers and submarines and supporter of former President Donald Trump from nearby Springfiel­d, Mo., blamed Biden and his administra­tion for rising inflation.

“With inflation, you’re working hard just to make ends meet, and then any extra work that you put in is just trying to get so you’re not in the hole,” he said, also mentioning that in the past “if you showed up for work and you did your job well and you tried to help out, you were rewarded.”

Diana Walker, 62, from a suburb of Atlanta, told the outlet that her kids “have not been rewarded,” and circumstan­ces were “better” for her growing up.

Gender divides

Unemployme­nt rates for black Americans hit a record low 5% in April. But the survey revealed 68% of black American voters said that economic and political forces were “stacked against” them. About half of Hispanic and white voters said the same.

Responses to the poll were more divided along gender lines, with 28% of women voters and 46% of male voters saying the American dream is still alive.

An age difference also shows up, with 48% of voters over the age of 65 believing in the potential to advance through hard work, while 28% of voters under the age of 50 agreed.

However, the percentage of US voters who currently rate the economy as “excellent” or “good” has doubled since last May, the poll found, as those who rated it “not so good” or “poor” fell from 83% to 65% over the same period.

The poll released Friday is not the only survey to reveal pessimism about the state of the US. A NBC News national poll released last week found that only 19% of respondent­s were confident life would be better for their children than for them — the lowest share to give that response since the outlet began polling the question back in the fall of 1990.

That same survey found that only 29% of Americans were doing better than they thought they would be at this stage in their life.

When asked about a hypothetic­al 2024 election matchup, the NBC poll showed former President Donald Trump leading President Biden by two percentage points, 46% to 44%, with 7% saying they didn’t want to vote for either major party front-runner.

The Journal-NORC poll, which was conducted from Oct. 19-24, surveyed 1,163 registered voters, with a margin of error of plus-orminus 4 percentage points.

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