75% of Democrats want party to go big on social spending, climate action

“The people delivered Democrats the House, Senate, and White House. Now it’s time for us to deliver them paid leave, child care, climate action, lower healthcare costs, pre-k, community college, affordable housing, and so much more.”

by Brett Wiliams, Common Dreams
Thursday, October 14, 2021
New polling from CNN and SRSS found that 75% of Democratic respondents favor a Build Back Better bill with more ambitious social and climate spending. (Photo: Paul Morigi/Getty Images for Unbendable Media)
New polling from CNN and SRSS found that 75% of Democratic respondents favor a Build Back Better bill with more ambitious social and climate spending. (Photo: Paul Morigi/Getty Images for Unbendable Media)

As congressional Democrats wrangle over the cost and coverage of their flagship Build Back Better package, new polling published Wednesday shows that an overwhelming majority of Democratic voters favor a progressive bill that goes further to combat social inequality and the climate emergency over a scaled-down package.

“Now is the time to restore the faith of the American people in their government, to show them that we in fact can deliver for them, that we can improve their lives… Let’s get it done.”
According to the CNN poll conducted by SSRS, 75% of surveyed Democrats prefer Congress to “pass a bill that enacts all of the proposed social safety net and climate change policies,” with support for such a package rising to 84% among liberals and falling to two-thirds among moderates and conservatives in the party.

Only 20% of Democrats polled prefer a bill with fewer of those provisions, while just 4% completely oppose the proposed legislation.

Overall, 41% of survey respondents said they prefer Congress to pass a reconciliation bill that funds more robust social and climate policies to less expensive legislation containing fewer of those provisions. Thirty percent said they want a scaled-down version of the package, while 29% say they are against any bill at all. Among surveyed Republicans, 55% said they want the bill to die.

The new poll comes as Democratic lawmakers continued struggling to agree on the scale and scope of the reconciliation package.

HuffPost reported Thursday that Democratic leaders recently floated a possible $2.5 trillion compromise reconciliation framework in a bid to gain the support of right-wing Democratic Sens. Joe Manchin (W.Va.) and Kyrsten Sinema (Ariz.), who oppose spending $3.5 trillion over 10 years.

The HuffPost report came on the heels of an Accountable.US analysis revealing that Manchin has received at least $1.5 million in campaign donations from businesses and trade groups leading a corporate lobbying blitz against the more ambitious $3.5 trillion proposal, which is already a compromise.

Meanwhile, progressives pushed back against efforts to further dilute the bill. On Wednesday, members of the Congressional Progressive Caucus (CPC) urged their moderate and right-wing colleagues to eschew “complicated methods of means-testing that the wealthy and powerful will use to divide us” in favor of universal programs.

“The people delivered Democrats the House, Senate, and White House,” CPC Chair Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.) tweeted Thursday. “Now it’s time for us to deliver them paid leave, child care, climate action, lower healthcare costs, pre-k, community college, affordable housing, and so much more.”


This article was published by Common Dreams on October 14, 2021, here

Our work is licensed under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0). Feel free to republish and share widely. 


Tell ’em what you think.

 

How to contact your US Senators:

Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, (Democrat)

Phx Office Phone:  (602) 598-7327

DC Office Phone: (202)0224-4521

email

 

Sen. Mark Kelly, (Democrat)

Kelly, Mark – (D – AZ)
B40B Dirksen Senate Office Building Washington DC 20510
DC Phone: 202-224-2235

 

We'd love to hear your thoughts feel free to comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.