USA TODAY US Edition

Economy isn’t No. 1 for many voters

NH Dems, independen­ts concerned for democracy

- Susan Page, Sudiksha Kochi and Savannah Kuchar

For Democratic and independen­t voters in New Hampshire this year, the most important challenge facing the United States isn’t the economy, the sort of kitchen-table quandaries that more often than not determine presidenti­al elections.

It’s the future of democracy.

A new USA TODAY/Boston Globe/ Suffolk University Poll two weeks before the Granite State’s pivotal primary finds half of Democrats (49%) and nearly 3 in 10 independen­ts (29%) rank that solemn and even philosophi­cal question well above such concrete concerns as health care or crime − defying the convention­al political wisdom over decades that maintains “It’s the economy, stupid.”

The survey was taken amid a series of stress tests for the nation’s democratic institutio­ns, including a federal appeals court hearing Tuesday to consider whether Donald Trump should be immune from criminal prosecutio­n for actions he took while president. A few weeks later, the Supreme Court has scheduled oral arguments in a case that considers whether Trump can be bumped off state ballots because of a constituti­onal ban on insurrecti­onists.

On Monday, President Joe Biden delivered his second speech in four days on concerns about democracy and freedom, speaking from the pulpit of the historic Emanuel AME Church in Charleston, South Carolina, site of a deadly mass shooting by a white nationalis­t in June 2015.

“It’s really just all morphed into saving democracy,” Christine Hayes, 50, a nurse from Rochester, New Hampshire, said in a follow-up interview after being called in the survey.

An independen­t, she plans to vote for former U.N. ambassador Nikki Haley in the Republican primary and then President Joe Biden in the general election. “We need democracy to be protected in this world, and so that then we can fight for reproducti­ve freedom, so that we can work on climate change, so that we can have conversati­ons.

“The whole political theater has just devolved in partisan craziness,” she said. “But I think my issue now is democracy.”

Overall, from a list of nine issues, democracy was chosen by 30% as the most important, followed by immigratio­n by 24% and the economy by 17%. No other issue broke into double digits.

The poll of 1,000 likely primary voters, taken by landline and cellphone Jan. 3-7, has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.1 percentage points.

In a hypothetic­al general-election matchup, Biden led Trump 42%-34%, with independen­t candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. at 8%.

In some ways, New Hampshire isn’t a particular­ly representa­tive state, with an overwhelmi­ngly white population and politics that leans libertaria­n. But it is a place where the residents already have been paying close attention to the presidenti­al campaign and its candidates, with views that could prove to be a harbinger for the rest of the country. Their focus on such a fundamenta­l precept − on the survival of the American experiment − underscore­s how high the stakes of this election seem to many citizens.

For GOP, all about the border

Republican­s also have a dominant issue that isn’t the economy: immigratio­n and border security.

A 51% majority of likely GOP voters call immigratio­n the nation’s most important issue, followed by 23% who cite the economy and 11% democracy.

Nearly half of all those surveyed, 47%, call the U.S. border “an emergency situation,” and another 32% say it is “a major problem.”

That’s notable in a state that sits along the northern border, next to Canada, which has been considerab­ly less disrupted by a flood of migrants than the southern border along Mexico.

Though most dismiss alarm about the Canadian border − 44% say they are “not at all concerned” and another 17% “not very concerned” − some worry that problems loom ahead.

“I feel Canada is probably going to be starting to see, you know, the immigratio­n, the illegal immigrants, cross their borders this way,” said Iris Buzzell, 53, a Republican from Concord, a health care profession­al who supports Trump.

She said migrants already are camping in the New Hampshire woods. “It’s horrible, the damage that they’re doing to the wildlife, the damage that they’re doing to our clean water,” she said. “The crime rate is going up. We need to do something.”

Concern about immigratio­n on the southern border is fueling criticism of Biden not only among Republican­s but also among Democrats and independen­ts. On a list of eight areas of presidenti­al action, Biden’s handling of the southern border is the most corrosive, prompting 51% of those surveyed to be less likely to support him and just 10% more likely to support him.

Biden’s strength: Abortion rights

Though his handling of immigratio­n is costing Biden’s support, his backing of abortion rights is bolstering him the most.

By 2-1, 48%-25%, those surveyed say Biden’s stance on abortion makes them more likely, not less likely, to support him. Among independen­ts, the swing voters who often determine elections, that divide is 52%-20%. For many, abortion is a voting issue. Nearly 1 in 4 (23%) say their opposition to the Supreme Court decision overturnin­g Roe v. Wade was “the main factor” motivating their vote in 2024. Another 1 in 3 (32%) say it is among the issues affecting their vote, though not the only one.

In contrast, just 16% say their support for the court’s decision is a factor in their vote. “I don’t need my state legislator or federal legislator in my OB-GYN’s office,” said Lynne Snierson, 71, a freelance writer from Hampstead and an independen­t who supports Biden.

“They didn’t go to medical school. It’s between a woman and her doctor and her conscience − the end, full stop.”

 ?? JOSH MORGAN/USA TODAY ?? Nadine Seiler demonstrat­es outside court in Washington as Donald Trump appeared to face federal charges in August.
JOSH MORGAN/USA TODAY Nadine Seiler demonstrat­es outside court in Washington as Donald Trump appeared to face federal charges in August.

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