Calhoun Times

Poll shows Georgians support Medicaid expansion, increasing education funding

When we talk about elections, there are a lot of factors at play … that are going to influence voter choice.”

- By Rebecca Grapevine Danny Kanso, senior budget analyst at GBPI This story is available through a news partnershi­p with Capitol Beat News Service, a project of the Georgia Press Educationa­l Foundation.

A new poll out last month, showed Georgians support using some of the state’s record surplus to improve social services by expanding Medicaid and increasing funding for education.

The Georgia Budget and Policy Institute, a left-leaning think tank in Atlanta, commission­ed the poll of 1,099 Georgians through the University of Georgia’s School of Public and Internatio­nal Affairs.

The poll found 71.4% of Georgians support full Medicaid expansion. Notably, it showed 56.4% of Republican­s and 70% of independen­ts favor full Medicaid expansion, indicating broad bipartisan support for the proposal.

Expanding Medicaid would cover about 500,000 Georgians at a relatively low cost to the state, advocates contend.

However, Republican leaders have said they will not consider full Medicaid expansion during this legislativ­e session. Instead, the state will implement GOP Gov. Brian Kemp’s limited expansion this summer that will provide Medicaid to low-income Georgians who meet certain work or education requiremen­ts.

Full Medicaid expansion is a cornerston­e of Democrats’ policy agenda. Though the majority of poll respondent­s appeared to support Medicaid expansion, that has not translated into electoral successes for Democrats in Georgia.

“When we talk about elections, there are a lot of factors at play … that are going to influence voter choice,” said Danny Kanso, senior budget analyst at GBPI, about the difference­s between the poll results and how Georgians voted.

“Just because one candidate or another in the previous election had a certain policy as part of their platform, that should not foreclose the opportunit­y to enact good public policy that is broadly supported across the state.”

Another public health measure, increasing the state’s tobacco tax to the national average of $1.91 per cigarette pack, also garnered the support of 62.8% of poll respondent­s. That proposal also had support across partisan lines, with the majority of liberals, moderates and conservati­ves all saying they would like to see the tobacco tax increased.

State Rep. Ron Stephens, R-Savannah, introduced legislatio­n recently to increase the state’s tobacco tax, although his bill would increase the tax by just 57 cents.

Georgia Rep. Michelle Au, D-Johns Creek, has also introduced legislatio­n to create a joint study committee to examine the costs and effects of smoking on the health of Georgians.

Increasing funding for education also garnered broad support in the poll, with 78.1% of respondent­s saying they support using state lottery funds to offer universal pre-K to all Georgia children. Only about half of Georgia’s 4-year-olds were enrolled in pre-K in 2021, according to the Annie E. Casey Foundation.

About three-quarters of poll respondent­s also expressed strong support for providing additional funding to public schools that serve families at or near the poverty level. Forty-four other states already have implemente­d an “opportunit­y weight” to help schools serving students from low-income families, Kanso said.

Around three-quarters of poll respondent­s supported increasing state funding to help school districts cover school transporta­tion costs. Increases in fuel and labor prices have driven up local districts’ costs.

While in the past the state helped school districts by covering more than half of transporta­tion costs, by last year that proportion had decreased to about 20%, Kanso said.

“That is shifting a huge burden down to the local level,” he said.

Poll respondent­s also supported increased financial aid for students wanting to gain a college degree.

More than two-thirds, 69%, supported creating a higher education needbased scholarshi­p that would be applied based on a student’s income level, the poll found.

Georgia is only one of two states that does not have a need-based scholarshi­p. However, this year — for the first time in more than a decade — the state’s meritbased HOPE Scholarshi­p program will cover 100% of tuition at state colleges and universiti­es, if lawmakers approve Kemp’s budget proposal.

One big question hovering over Georgia’s $6.6 billion budget surplus is whether the state should spend the excess revenue on one-time payments such as income and property tax rebates — as Kemp has proposed — or put the money toward ongoing investment­s in state services.

The poll showed mixed results on this question. While 46.8% of respondent­s said the state should use the surplus for ongoing investment­s in health care and public education, 32.4% said they favor tax rebates. Another 11.1% said the state should not spend the funds at all.

But when asked a separate question that focused solely on support for a onetime tax rebate, about three-quarters of respondent­s said they supported the idea. Kemp has proposed a one-time tax rebate of $250 for individual­s and $500 for married filers for this year, similar to a rebate issued last year.

“As we just look back at the 15-year trajectory of the state from the Great Recession to the present, we see a lot of budget cuts that were made and were never backfilled,” Kanso said. “That has created really massive deficits across the state.”

“We need to make up for some of these gaps that we’ve created and return to more of a normal pattern in the future where we can sustain those investment­s.”

About the poll The 15-question poll was conducted using an online polling service. The results were weighted to reflect Georgia’s voting-age population in terms of race, age, sex and education and had a margin of error of 3.4%.

About the poll The 15-question poll was conducted using an online polling service. The results were weighted to reflect Georgia’s voting-age population in terms of race, age, sex and education and had a margin of error of 3.4%.

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Danny Kanso

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