According to a Washington Post and ABC News survey, climate change still ranks dead last in importance as an issue of concern among those surveyed as they prepare to vote in the coming mid-term elections.
This confirms what previous polls have shown: issues such as the economy, crime, education, and immigration are more important to the vast majority of voters than climate change. [bold, links added]
As reported by Newsweek, the Washington Post and ABC News polled 1,000 adults across the United States, between September 18 and 21, concerning the issues that are topmost on their minds as they consider voting in the midterm elections, and which party they think can best address the issues that most concern them.
The survey distinguished between the responses of registered voters and adults in general.
The economy was ranked by registered voters and all adults alike as the top issue which concerns them.
Twenty-seven percent of registered voters surveyed ranked the economy as the single most important issue, with another 58 percent ranking it as very important (85 percent combined).
Among registered voters, Inflation (79 percent), Education and Schools (77 percent), and Crime (67 percent) ranked second, third, and fourth, respectively, when the “one of most important,” and “very important,” categories were combined.
Abortion and Immigration (both with 62 percent combined scores) tied for fifth among the most important issues of concern.
Climate change ranked last, with a most important-very important combined score of 51 percent among registered voters and only 50 percent among adults in general. No other issue received a combined “most important-very important” score of less than 61 percent, among either group surveyed.
Only 14 percent of registered voters and 13 percent of adults, in general, ranked climate change as “one of the most” important issues, compared to 27 percent and 26 percent of registered voters and adults respectively, who ranked the economy as the top issue.
The results of the Washington Post/ABC News poll are consistent with previously conducted public opinion surveys discussed by Climate Realism here and here, for example.
Climate Change Weekly has covered the results of numerous public opinion surveys, as well, here, here, and here, for instance.
The consistent message concerning climate change delivered by public opinion surveys conducted across the years is threefold: most of those surveyed are at least somewhat concerned about climate change, but they are unwilling to pay much if anything to prevent it, and when climate change is compared to other public policy issues, it ranks last or near last in importance.
“Despite its poll ranking, climate change is trending upward,” wrote Newsweek, following the Washington Post’s lead in trying to put a positive spin on its survey’s results vis-à-vis climate change.
“The Washington Post-ABC News poll found that those considering climate change as an important issue increased 2 percent over 2018 results and 3 percent over 2014 results.”
This small three percentage point change over the past 8 years can hardly be considered much of a gain for those concerned that the United States is not doing enough to fight climate change.
It is very minuscule indeed when one considers the billions of dollars spent by governments hyping climate change as catastrophic, and the hundreds of millions of dollars in paid and free media coverage given to the topic.
All of that spending was done in the hopes of motivating the public to believe climate change is dangerous and merits significant government action, but voters just don’t care that much.
Read more at Climate Realism
$ 10 gas by Xmas, $ 20 gas by Easter
A poll I saw recently said that for Democrat voters, climate ranked very high as an issue, but very low for Republicans. We have a different system in the UK: we don’t have “registered voters” as such – everyone on the electoral roll is a voter. And no-one is recorded as a supporter of any particular party. Climate generally ranks pretty low among people polled in the UK. Young people worry more – they are greenwashed at school.
Too bad Eco-Freaks but Americans have more important things to worry about then some fake crisis of Climate Change/Global Warming
The polls don’t matter. This Administrartion, chocked full of environmental ideologues does not seem to recognize (or care) about public sentiments on climate. THEY are the smartest people in the room. What most of them have forgotten is that public servants work for the PEOPLE. They only govern with the consent of the govern. Basic American CIVICS. Hopefully, the voters will send a string message on Nov. 8 that they are TIRED of the current course and seek a new direction back towards sensible governance. One can only hope…
To the SMELLOCRAT
Public Service means their innate right to DICTATE
and DECLARE what everyone’s future will be allowed to be.