As economic data continues to impress — low unemployment, steady growth, reduced inflation — there’s been quite a bit of discussion about President Joe Biden and the degree to which he’s struggled to get credit for the progress. As The Wall Street Journal reported overnight, “Voters have a slightly rosier view of the economy now that inflation is easing. Few are giving President Biden credit for the improvement.”
There are plenty of competing theories as to why the White House hasn’t benefited more politically from the good economic news, but the Wall Street Journal’s latest national poll raised a related question: Are Republican voters even aware of the good economic news?
The survey asked respondents, for example, whether inflation has moved in the right direction or the wrong direction over the past year. The results among likely GOP primary voters were clearly lopsided:
- Right direction: 8%
- Wrong direction: 92%
The poll also asked whether the stock market has gotten better or worse over the last year. On this, the results among Republican primary voters were a bit closer, but still clear:
- Right direction: 18%
- Wrong direction: 69%
The same data found that 88% of GOP primary voters said the economy has gotten worse over the last couple of years, and 70% said the U.S. job market has gotten worse.








