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Poll: As Midterms Approach, Health Care Remains Voters’ Top Issue,
But President Trump and Other Factors Also Loom Large
In Bellwether Elections in Florida
and Nevada, Voters Want Candidates to Protect People with Pre-Existing
Conditions from Insurance Discrimination
Most
Florida Voters Favor Expanding Medicaid in their State, As Do Voters across
All Non-Expansion States
In an expansive look at the role issues and
politics may play in the 2018 midterm elections, the latest KFF Health Tracking Poll continues to find
health care as the top issue for voters, but large shares of voters also say
candidate characteristics, President Trump, and party control over Congress
will be major factors.
In the last KFF
tracking poll conducted prior to the midterms and in two separate surveys of
bellwether states Florida and Nevada, voters, nationally, in key
battlegrounds, and in Florida and Nevada, rank health care above other issues.
Midterm elections are often viewed as a referendum
on the president, and two-thirds (66%) of voters say a candidates’ support
for or opposition to President Trump will be a major factor in their voting
decision. Other important factors include the candidates’ character and
experience (73%) and which party controls Congress (66%).
Fewer voters (51%),
but still a majority of Democrats and Republicans, say the candidates’ political
party will be a major factor. Despite the recent attention given to female
candidates, only a small share (6%) say the candidates’ gender will be a
major factor.
When looking at the
role of issues in the 2018 midterms, health care is voters’ top issue with
seven in 10 (71%) saying health care is “very important” in deciding who they
will vote for. Other top issues are the economy and jobs (64%), gun policy
(60%), and immigration (55%).
While at least half of voters say all of the
issues are “very important” to their vote, when asked to choose the one issue
that is the most important, health care is chosen by at least one-fourth of
voters nationally, in key battlegrounds, and in Florida and Nevada, ranking
among the top issues in each election. It is the top issue for Democratic
voters, yet, in all of these elections, the issue ranks lower for Republican
voters, who rank immigration and the economy and jobs at the top of their
list.
Health care is also among the top voting issues
chosen by women voters of all partisan stripes. Nationally more than
one-third of women voters (36%) say health care is the most important issue,
including four in ten Democratic women voters (43%) and independent women
voters (38%) and one-fifth of Republican women voters (22%).
Democratic women voters could be particularly
important in this year’s elections, as the poll finds that more than half
(55%) of this group nationally say they are more enthusiastic about voting this year compared to past years. Less than half
of Republican (45%) and independent (30%) women say they are more
enthusiastic this year.
In spite of health
care’s high ranking, the poll finds fewer than half of voters say they are
hearing “a lot” from political candidates about specific health care issues.
Immigration is the only issue that a majority (58%) say they are hearing a
lot about, while half (51%) say they are hearing a lot about candidates’
support for or opposition to President Trump.
Among health care
issues, those that the largest share of voters say they are hearing a lot
about are the prescription painkiller epidemic (38%), the 2010 Affordable
Care Act (35%) and continuing protections for people with pre-existing
conditions (23%). Fewer voters say they are hearing a lot about a national
health plan or Medicare-for-all (17%).
In states that have
not expanded their Medicaid programs under the Affordable Care Act, including
four with related ballot initiatives, few voters (15%) say they’ve heard a
lot about the issue.
Florida
and Nevada: A Look at Health Care Issues in Two Bellwether States
In addition to the
national tracking poll, KFF also conducted separate surveys in Florida and
Nevada, two bellwether states with competitive gubernatorial and Senate
races, looking at how candidate positions on health care may impact voters.
In both Florida and Nevada, one specific health care position stands above
all others in terms of its importance to voters: protecting people with
pre-existing conditions from insurance discrimination.
Nearly seven in 10
voters in both Florida (69%) and Nevada (68%) say that they would be more
likely to vote for a candidate who wants to maintain the Affordable Care
Act’s protections for people with pre-existing conditions even if it results
in higher costs for healthy people, while small shares (9% in Florida, 8% in
Nevada) say they’d favor a candidate who wants to eliminate those protections. This includes majorities of
Democrats and independents in both states, as well as a majority of Nevada
Republicans (60%) and nearly half of Florida Republicans (46%).
On the issue of
pre-existing conditions in the gubernatorial race, more Florida voters say
they have more trust in Democratic candidate Andrew Gillum (43%) than
Republican candidate Ron DeSantis (29%). In Nevada’s gubernatorial election,
voters are split evenly on who they trust more on this issue between
Republican Adam Laxalt and Democrat Steve Sisolak (33% and 30%, respectively).
The Florida poll also
finds that most residents (59%) favor expanding the state’s Medicaid program
to cover low-income childless adults largely with federal funds, almost
double the share (34%) who say they prefer to keep the state’s Medicaid
program as it is. The results are similar across all 17 states that have not expanded
their Medicaid programs in KFF’s national poll.
Among Florida voters,
almost half (49%) say they would be more likely to vote for a candidate who
supports Medicaid expansion, while nearly three in 10 (28%) say they would be
more likely to vote for a candidate who wants to keep Medicaid as it is.
Methodology
Designed and analyzed
by public opinion researchers at the Kaiser Family Foundation, the poll was
conducted from September 19-October 2 among a nationally representative
random digit dial telephone sample of 1,201 adults as well as a
representative sample of Florida residents (599) and Nevada residents (599).
Interviews were conducted in English and Spanish by landline and cell phone.
The margin of sampling error is plus or minus 3 percentage points for the
full national sample, 5 percentage points for Florida sample, and 5
percentage points for Nevada sample. For results based on subgroups, the
margin of sampling error may be higher.
Filling
the need for trusted information on national health issues,
the Kaiser Family Foundation is a nonprofit organization based in San
Francisco, California.
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Thursday, October 18, 2018
Poll: As Midterms Approach, Health Care Remains Voters’ Top Issue, But President Trump and Other Factors Also Loom Large
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