The Boston Globe

Independen­t voters eye the economy

- Larry Edelman TRENDLINES

We know Democrats and Republican­s are sharply divided. Their views on the economy are no exception.

But what about unenrolled voters, also known as independen­ts, who far outnumber Democrats and Republican­s in Massachuse­tts?

A new state poll by Suffolk University and The Boston Globe offers a look at how independen­ts, who occupy a wide middle lane among Massachuse­tts voters, are thinking about their financial futures compared with voters registered with the two major parties.

While the Bay State has long been an outlier in national politics — Google “Don’t Blame Me, I’m From Massachuse­tts” — responses from independen­ts here may help understand the views of a segment of moderate voters in swing states who are expected to be pivotal in the November presidenti­al election.

The news: Independen­ts are less likely to share Democrats’ rosy take on the state’s economy, but they are nowhere near as gloomy as Republican­s.

In the poll, 43 percent of independen­ts said the local economy was in “excellent” or “good” shape. Nearly twothirds of Democrats responded “excellent” or “good,” while just 17 percent of GOP voters agreed with that assessment. Digging deeper: All three groups said inflation was their most pressing economic issue, but independen­ts and Republican­s were noticeably more focused on prices than Democrats.

Among independen­ts, 53 percent said inflation was their biggest economic worry, while it topped the list for 73 percent GOP respondent­s. Thirty-three percent of Democrats called inflation their prime economic concern, only slightly more than those who chose housing costs.

Why it matters: Inflation has put President Biden on the defensive on the campaign trail.

Soaring prices in 2021 and 2022 left goods and services painfully expensive, undercutti­ng positive economic fundamenta­ls — including expanding growth, low unemployme­nt, and rising wages — that the president would like voters to give him credit for. In national polls, more voters say they have more confidence in Donald Trump’s ability to manage the economy.

The fact that inflation cooled significan­tly last year doesn’t seem to be helping Biden much because the tabs for groceries and gasoline still take a bigger bite out of household paychecks than they did before the pandemic.

But: The economy is vying with immigratio­n and protecting democracy from political extremism as the most important issue for voters, in Massachuse­tts and nationally.

Tellingly, the issues vary in importance for each voting group.

According to the Suffolk/ Globe poll, 44 percent of Republican­s said immigratio­n/border security was their top concern, followed by the economy at 33 percent and the future of American democracy at 13 percent.

In contrast, 41 percent of Democrats said the future of American democracy was their paramount issue, ahead of abortion, 13 percent, and the economy, 10 percent. (Only 7 percent of Democrats said immigratio­n was their top issue.)

But the center is where national elections are won or lost. And for Massachuse­tts independen­ts, no one issue is an outsize concern.

One in four independen­ts said their top worry was protecting democracy, matching the percentage who cited immigratio­n. The economy was the most important issue for 18 percent of independen­ts.

And when it came to backing a candidate for president, unenrolled voters went with Biden over Trump, 43 percent to 24 percent. Among all voters, the poll had Biden beating Trump 52 percent to 22 percent.

Final thought: Independen­ts in true-blue Massachuse­tts skew more liberal than those in purple states such as Georgia, Pennsylvan­ia, and Nevada that could well decide the election. Our state is one of the wealthiest in the country, which means inflation isn’t quite the scourge it is elsewhere.

Biden won in 2020 by positionin­g himself as the candidate of the middle.

But the results of the Suffolk/ Globe poll suggest that even among moderates, the economy is an issue that will make his 2024 campaign all the more challengin­g.

 ?? ?? GLOBE STAFF 500 Likely Massachuse­tts voters MOE +/- 4.4 percentage points. Field 4/6-4/20 Live caller mobile and landline. Source: Suffolk University/Boston Globe.
GLOBE STAFF 500 Likely Massachuse­tts voters MOE +/- 4.4 percentage points. Field 4/6-4/20 Live caller mobile and landline. Source: Suffolk University/Boston Globe.

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