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Tuesday, August 18, 2020

PA Rural Voters and the Postal Service

In Defying the Odds, we discuss the 2016 campaign. The 2019 update includes a chapter on the 2018 midterms. The 2020 race, the subject of our next book, is well underway.  

Rachel Bitecofer at the Niskanen Center:

Poll shows rural voters oppose USPS cuts
In selected rural, Republican districts in Battlefield PA, voters say they are less likely to back a candidate who supports defunding or privatizing the U.S Postal Service. Mail-in voting and in-person school show a sharp partisan split. 
Despite a party breakdown of 56% Republican, 34% Democrat in this survey, reflecting the rural Pennsylvania congressional districts sampled, 57% of these likely 2020 voters report they’d be less likely to support a candidate who reduced the budget for the U.S Postal Service, or privatized the agency, including 43% of Republicans. 
  • 52% of these likely voters report they are “not likely at all” to vote by mail this fall, driven almost entirely by Republican voters’ strong rejection of the option. 68% of Republicans report they are “not at all likely” to vote by mail while 53% of Democrats say they are “very likely.”
  •  53% of rural voters say they are “very” or “somewhat” reliant on USPS service. Rural Republicans profess much less reliance on USPS than rural Democrats -- just 17% of Republicans report being “very” reliant while 43% of “Democrats” say the same, indicating a party effect. 
  • 51% of rural voters report being “concerned” about changes at USPS. Partisanship exerts strong influence over rural voter attitudes. 63% of Republicans report they are “not at all concerned” by changes at USPS while 71% of Democrats are “very concerned.” 
  • 62% of rural voters approve of President Trump’s handling of the pandemic, driven by the disproportionate number of Republicans in these rural districts, and the high marks Republicans give him. With a similar partisan effect, rural voters rate the performance of their elected state officials, who are Democrats, much lower, as just 44% approve.  
  • 47% of these rural voters support in-person, 5-day-a-week school this fall, with a sharp partisan divide on the issue. Just 4% of Republicans support “online only,” while only 17% of Democrats endorse full-week, in-person classes.