The Arizona Republic

Americans support requiring masks

- Michael R. Blood and Emily Swanson

LOS ANGELES – Three out of four Americans, including a majority of Republican­s, favor requiring people to wear face coverings while outside their homes, a new poll finds, reflecting fresh alarm over spiking coronaviru­s cases and a growing embrace of government advice intended to safeguard public health.

The survey from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research also finds that about twothirds of Americans disapprove of how President Donald Trump is handling the outbreak, an unwelcome sign for the White House in an election year shaped by the battle with the pandemic.

More than four months after government stay-at-home orders first swept across the U.S., the poll spotlights an America increasing­ly on edge about the virus. The federal government’s response is seen as falling short, and most Americans favor continued restrictio­ns to stop the virus from spreading even if they might hamstring the economy.

Support for requiring masks is overwhelmi­ng among Democrats, at 89%, but 58% of Republican­s are in favor as well. The poll was conducted before Trump, who for months was dismissive of masks, said this week that it’s patriotic to wear one.

“Not wearing a mask, to me, poses a greater risk of spreading the COVID,” said Darius Blevins, a 33-year-old Republican-leaning independen­t from Christians­burg, Virginia, who works in bank operations. Blevins said he wears a mask in public because “it’s much more effective than not wearing the mask.”

It’s an opinion echoed by data analyst James Shaw, an independen­t who tilts Democratic. “If you understand the facts, there is really no issue,” said Shaw, 56, of Noble, Illinois.

For months health officials have said several simple steps could save lives – washing hands frequently, staying away from crowds, especially while indoors, and pulling on a mask when heading out to the supermarke­t, the office or a restaurant. And despite heated rhetoric about masks in some corners, 95% of Democrats and 75% of Republican­s said they’re wearing face coverings when leaving the house. Overall, 86% of Americans say they’re doing so, compared with 73% in May.

State and local government­s have tried to find a balance between restrictio­ns intended to limit the virus’s spread, such as closing bars and indoor dining at restaurant­s, and getting workers back on the job after many businesses were idled and millions of people were left jobless by the initial stay-at-home orders.

About half of Americans now say they’re extremely or very worried about themselves or someone in their families being infected with the virus – about the same as in March, but a steep increase from June, when just 32% said they were that concerned. Republican­s were less likely to be anxious about the illness, but concern rose among members of both parties.

There were other signs of continued unease. Support for limiting the size of gatherings ticked back up to 66%, after sliding for several months to a low of 59% in June. Eighty-five percent of Americans say they’re avoiding large groups.

 ?? MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ/AP ?? A new poll shows Americans are concerned about the coronaviru­s and believe masks can help contain the spread.
MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ/AP A new poll shows Americans are concerned about the coronaviru­s and believe masks can help contain the spread.

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