Swing-state voters (including Republicans) want federal help with child-care costs

New polling suggests a broad and bipartisan consensus in battleground states when it comes to federal help for parents raising children.The survey released Wednesday by the University of Maryland’s Program for Public Consultation (PPC) polled 600 likely voters in Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin, with results exhibiting strong majorities in favor of federal support for increasing the Child Tax Credit, universal preschool funding, childcare subsidies, and paid family and medical leave.And Republicans are on board too, so championing these issues may be the key to making inroads in these closely-fought battlegrounds and picking up their cumulative 77 electoral votes.“There is strong bipartisan support for the Federal government taking a more active role in strengthening the support system for families, especially those with children,” remarks program director Steven Kull, by way of contextualizing the numbers.With Kamala Harris and J.D.Vance both championing an increase in the Child Tax Credit this cycle, it’s no surprise that the proposal is getting traction in these half-dozen states.Support in each state ranges from 69% in Wisconsin to 77% in Georgia, where a robust 71% of Republicans are in favor.

The $6,000 level is what Harris floated in rolling out her policy proposals earlier this month.For his part, Vance proposed a $5,000 credit.Unsurprisingly, the child tax credit is more popular with younger voters than the older set, with only 43% of senior citizens in favor across the swing states.Universal preschool is even more popular, meanwhile, with overall support ranging from 76% in Pennsylvania and Wisconsin to 83% in Georgia and Michigan, again with resounding GOP support ranging from 63% to 78% across the six swing states.Childcare subsidies are also a political winner across party lines, with a proposal tested to make it free for low-income parents and capped at 7% of income for the middle-income cohort.Overall support ...

Read More 
PaprClips
Disclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by PaprClips.
Publisher: New York Post

Recent Articles