Boston Herald

Poll: Inflation weighing on voters’ minds

- — assOCIated Press

Heading into a critical midterm election year, the top political concerns of Americans are shifting in ways that suggest Democrats face considerab­le challenges to maintainin­g their control of Congress.

A poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research finds that management of the coronaviru­s pandemic, once an issue that strongly favored President Biden and his fellow Democrats, is beginning to recede in the minds of Americans. COVID19 is increasing­ly overshadow­ed by concerns about the economy and personal finances — particular­ly inflation — which are topics that could lift Republican­s.

Just 37% of Americans name the virus as one of their top five priorities for the government to work on in 2022, compared with 53% who said it was a leading priority at the same time a year ago. The economy outpaced the pandemic in the open-ended question, with 68% of respondent­s mentioning it in some way as a top 2022 concern. A similar percentage said the same last year, but mentions of inflation are much higher now: 14% this year, compared with less than 1% last year.

Consumer prices jumped 6.8% for the 12 months ending in November, a nearly four-decade high. Meanwhile, roughly twice as many Americans now mention their household finances, namely, the cost of living, as a government­al priority, 24% vs. 12% last year.

The poll was conducted in early December, when worries about the virus were rising as omicron took hold in the country, but before it sparked record caseloads, overwhelme­d testing sites and hospitals and upended holiday travel. Still, in recent follow-up interviews with participan­ts, including self-identified Democrats, many said those developmen­ts didn’t shake their views.

“If we say anything along the lines of, ‘Let’s wait until the pandemic dies down,’ well, this son of a gun virus has unlimited ability to mutate,” said Mary Small, a 65-yearold pharmaceut­ical research contractor in Downingtow­n, Pa., who hopes efforts to promote gun safety will take center stage.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States