Elected officials routinely say they’re uninterested in polls, focusing entirely on substantive ideas and their merits, but politicians also tend to care about making voters happy and winning elections — which means public-opinion surveys can’t be ignored.
With this in mind, as President Biden and congressional Democrats move forward with a debate over infrastructure investments, results like these, from the new Fox News poll, should generate quite a bit of interest.
Majorities like the infrastructure packages being considered by Washington lawmakers. Sixty-two percent favor the $1 trillion U.S. Senate package that focuses on roads, bridges, and rail service, and 56 percent favor the additional items such as climate change and childcare included in the U.S. House’s $3.5 trillion package.
The findings are roughly in line with the available data from other recent national surveys. A Monmouth poll from late July, for example, found 70% support for the bipartisan package, and 63% for the more ambitious expansion of the safety net. A Quinnipiac poll from last week, meanwhile, found 65% support for the bipartisan infrastructure proposal, and 62% for Democrats’ reconciliation plan.
For proponents of the bill that passed the Senate this week — a package that focuses on priorities such as bridges, broadband, and transit — the strong public support should help bring the legislation closer to becoming law. Indeed, White House Chief of Staff Ron Klain boasted late last week, “I’ve been doing this a long time. I can recall few things as significant — and as widely and well-supported — as the Bipartisan Infrastructure Bill.”
But while the “human infrastructure” bill — which would invest in health care, child care, housing, education, climate, et al. — doesn’t enjoy quite the same level of support, it’s pretty close, and each of the recent national surveys show a majority of Americans endorsing the plan.
For on-the-fence Democrats on Capitol Hill, this really ought to matter.









