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What Millennials Think of Government
Jul 10, 2014 19:33:20   #
AuntiE Loc: 45th Least Free State
 
http://reason.com/poll/2014/07/10/reason-rupe-2014-millennial-survey

Millennials Think Government Is Inefficient, Abuses Its Power, and Supports Cronyism

But young Americans also want government to guarantee health insurance and living wages; plan to v**e for Democrats in 2014 and 2016

Read the full report here
Read the toplines here
10 Findings About the Millennial Generation, found here
Find charts from the report, compiled here
Read detailed tables/crosstabs of the results here
Survey methodology described here
Emily Ekins discusses millennials with ReasonTV here, and here


A Reason-Rupe survey of 2,000 Americans between the ages of 18 and 29 finds 66 percent of millennials believe government is inefficient and wasteful — a substantial increase since 2009, when just 42 percent of millennials said government was inefficient and wasteful.

Nearly two-thirds of millennials, 63 percent, think government regulators favor special interests, whereas just 18 percent feel regulators act in the public’s interest. Similarly, 58 percent of 18-to-29 year-olds are convinced government agencies abuse their powers, while merely 25 percent trust government agencies to do the right thing.

The Reason-Rupe report finds this skepticism of government has millennials favoring general reductions to government spending and regulations:

73 percent of millennials favor allowing private accounts for Social Security; 51 percent favor private accounts even it means cutting Social Security benefits for current and future retirees because 53 percent of millennials say Social Security is unlikely to exist when they retire
64 percent of millennials say cutting government spending by 5 percent would help the economy
59 percent say cutting taxes would help the economy
57 percent prefer a smaller government providing fewer services with low taxes, while 41 percent prefer a larger government providing more services with high taxes
57 percent want a society where wealth is distributed according to achievement
55 percent say reducing regulations would help the economy
53 percent say reducing the size of government would help the economy
74 percent of millennials say government has a responsibility to guarantee every citizen has a place to sleep and enough to eat
However, millennials also support more government action and higher spending in a number of key areas:

71 percent favor raising the federal minimum wage to $10.10 an hour
69 percent say it is government’s responsibility to guarantee everyone access to health care and 51 percent have a favorable view of the Affordable Care Act
68 percent say government should ensure everyone makes a living wage
66 percent say raising taxes on the wealthy would help the economy
63 percent say spending more on job training would help the economy
58 percent say the government should spend more on assistance to the poor even it means higher taxes
57 percent favor spending more money on infrastructure
54 percent favor a larger government that provides more services, when taxes are not mentioned
54 percent want government to guarantee everyone a college education
Sixty-two percent of millennials describe themselves as socially liberal, while 27 percent say they are socially conservative. The gap is much narrower on economic issues, with 49 percent of millennials identifying themselves as economic liberals and 36 percent labeling themselves as economic conservatives.

Millennials’ social liberalism is mixed with strong opposition to many nanny state regulations:

72 percent of millennials say large sugary sodas and drinks should be allowed to be sold
67 percent of millennials favor legalizing same-sex marriage
61 percent say a******n should be legal in all or most cases
61 percent say people should be able to buy foods containing t***s fats
60 percent want to allow e-cigarette use in public places
59 percent say the government should allow online gambling
57 percent say marijuana should be legal, although just 22 percent say cocaine should be legal
52 percent say either the government should not set a legal drinking age or that the legal drinking age should be lower than 21
2014 and 2016 E******ns

Of those registered to v**e, 76 percent of millennials say they plan to v**e in the 2014 midterm e******ns. Fifty-three percent of registered millennials tell Reason-Rupe they plan to v**e for the Democratic congressional candidate in their district this November, while 29 percent intend to v**e for the Republican. For Democrats that’s a sharp decline from the 64 percent of millennials who say they v**ed for President Barack Obama in 2012.

Things look better for Democrats in 2016, however. When asked to select their top choice for president in 2016, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was the top choice of 39 percent of registered millennial v**ers, followed by Sen. Elizabeth Warren (8 percent), Vice President Joe Biden (6 percent) and the top Republican, Rep. Paul Ryan (6 percent). Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee and Sen. Rand Paul were each the top choice of 5 percent of registered millennial v**ers.

A majority of millennials, 52 percent, identify themselves as independents when first asked. Just 16 percent self-identify as Republicans, while 32 percent say they’re Democrats. Including those leaning towards a party, 43 percent of millennials identify as Democrats, 35 percent as independents, and only 23 percent classify themselves as Republicans.

Millennials don’t identify with the political parties and don’t have much confidence in them. When asked who they trust most to handle a series of policy issues, young Americans say they trust “neither” party to handle 12 of 15 issues surveyed. Millennials do trust Democrats the most on gay marriage, the environment, and poverty, while only trusting Republicans the most on promoting entrepreneurship.

About the Reason-Rupe Poll

The Reason-Rupe national poll, executed by YouGov, surveyed 2,000 adults between the ages of 18 and 29 online from February 28 to March 11, 2014. The poll’s margin of error is plus or minus 3.4 percent.

The complete study, “Millennials: The Politically Unclaimed Generation” by Reason-Rupe Polling Director Emily Ekins, is online here (.pdf). Note from AuntiE...the PDF is about 105 pages

This is the latest in a series of Reason-Rupe public opinion surveys dedicated to exploring what Americans really think about government and major issues. This Reason Foundation project is made possible thanks to the generous support of the Arthur N. Rupe Foundation.

Reply
Jul 10, 2014 19:41:04   #
Caboose Loc: South Carolina
 
AuntiE wrote:
http://reason.com/poll/2014/07/10/reason-rupe-2014-millennial-survey

Millennials Think Government Is Inefficient, Abuses Its Power, and Supports Cronyism

But young Americans also want government to guarantee health insurance and living wages; plan to v**e for Democrats in 2014 and 2016

Read the full report here
Read the toplines here
10 Findings About the Millennial Generation, found here
Find charts from the report, compiled here
Read detailed tables/crosstabs of the results here
Survey methodology described here
Emily Ekins discusses millennials with ReasonTV here, and here


A Reason-Rupe survey of 2,000 Americans between the ages of 18 and 29 finds 66 percent of millennials believe government is inefficient and wasteful — a substantial increase since 2009, when just 42 percent of millennials said government was inefficient and wasteful.

Nearly two-thirds of millennials, 63 percent, think government regulators favor special interests, whereas just 18 percent feel regulators act in the public’s interest. Similarly, 58 percent of 18-to-29 year-olds are convinced government agencies abuse their powers, while merely 25 percent trust government agencies to do the right thing.

The Reason-Rupe report finds this skepticism of government has millennials favoring general reductions to government spending and regulations:

73 percent of millennials favor allowing private accounts for Social Security; 51 percent favor private accounts even it means cutting Social Security benefits for current and future retirees because 53 percent of millennials say Social Security is unlikely to exist when they retire
64 percent of millennials say cutting government spending by 5 percent would help the economy
59 percent say cutting taxes would help the economy
57 percent prefer a smaller government providing fewer services with low taxes, while 41 percent prefer a larger government providing more services with high taxes
57 percent want a society where wealth is distributed according to achievement
55 percent say reducing regulations would help the economy
53 percent say reducing the size of government would help the economy
74 percent of millennials say government has a responsibility to guarantee every citizen has a place to sleep and enough to eat
However, millennials also support more government action and higher spending in a number of key areas:

71 percent favor raising the federal minimum wage to $10.10 an hour
69 percent say it is government’s responsibility to guarantee everyone access to health care and 51 percent have a favorable view of the Affordable Care Act
68 percent say government should ensure everyone makes a living wage
66 percent say raising taxes on the wealthy would help the economy
63 percent say spending more on job training would help the economy
58 percent say the government should spend more on assistance to the poor even it means higher taxes
57 percent favor spending more money on infrastructure
54 percent favor a larger government that provides more services, when taxes are not mentioned
54 percent want government to guarantee everyone a college education
Sixty-two percent of millennials describe themselves as socially liberal, while 27 percent say they are socially conservative. The gap is much narrower on economic issues, with 49 percent of millennials identifying themselves as economic liberals and 36 percent labeling themselves as economic conservatives.

Millennials’ social liberalism is mixed with strong opposition to many nanny state regulations:

72 percent of millennials say large sugary sodas and drinks should be allowed to be sold
67 percent of millennials favor legalizing same-sex marriage
61 percent say a******n should be legal in all or most cases
61 percent say people should be able to buy foods containing t***s fats
60 percent want to allow e-cigarette use in public places
59 percent say the government should allow online gambling
57 percent say marijuana should be legal, although just 22 percent say cocaine should be legal
52 percent say either the government should not set a legal drinking age or that the legal drinking age should be lower than 21
2014 and 2016 E******ns

Of those registered to v**e, 76 percent of millennials say they plan to v**e in the 2014 midterm e******ns. Fifty-three percent of registered millennials tell Reason-Rupe they plan to v**e for the Democratic congressional candidate in their district this November, while 29 percent intend to v**e for the Republican. For Democrats that’s a sharp decline from the 64 percent of millennials who say they v**ed for President Barack Obama in 2012.

Things look better for Democrats in 2016, however. When asked to select their top choice for president in 2016, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was the top choice of 39 percent of registered millennial v**ers, followed by Sen. Elizabeth Warren (8 percent), Vice President Joe Biden (6 percent) and the top Republican, Rep. Paul Ryan (6 percent). Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee and Sen. Rand Paul were each the top choice of 5 percent of registered millennial v**ers.

A majority of millennials, 52 percent, identify themselves as independents when first asked. Just 16 percent self-identify as Republicans, while 32 percent say they’re Democrats. Including those leaning towards a party, 43 percent of millennials identify as Democrats, 35 percent as independents, and only 23 percent classify themselves as Republicans.

Millennials don’t identify with the political parties and don’t have much confidence in them. When asked who they trust most to handle a series of policy issues, young Americans say they trust “neither” party to handle 12 of 15 issues surveyed. Millennials do trust Democrats the most on gay marriage, the environment, and poverty, while only trusting Republicans the most on promoting entrepreneurship.

About the Reason-Rupe Poll

The Reason-Rupe national poll, executed by YouGov, surveyed 2,000 adults between the ages of 18 and 29 online from February 28 to March 11, 2014. The poll’s margin of error is plus or minus 3.4 percent.

The complete study, “Millennials: The Politically Unclaimed Generation” by Reason-Rupe Polling Director Emily Ekins, is online here (.pdf). Note from AuntiE...the PDF is about 105 pages

This is the latest in a series of Reason-Rupe public opinion surveys dedicated to exploring what Americans really think about government and major issues. This Reason Foundation project is made possible thanks to the generous support of the Arthur N. Rupe Foundation.
http://reason.com/poll/2014/07/10/reason-rupe-2014... (show quote)


Young people know nothing about the Constitution. It is not being taught in schools because of the left. Therefore young
people dont know that healthcare is not in the Constitution.
The role of the Fed government is to keep america safe not
to provide benefits.

Reply
Jul 10, 2014 19:55:07   #
AuntiE Loc: 45th Least Free State
 
Caboose wrote:
Young people know nothing about the Constitution. It is not being taught in schools because of the left. Therefore young
people dont know that healthcare is not in the Constitution.
The role of the Fed government is to keep america safe not
to provide benefits.


I truly am not being h**eful. The only thing you picked out of all this information was health insurance? :shock:

Reply
 
 
Jul 10, 2014 19:56:28   #
just chris
 
Sure sounds like the GOP is on the wrong side of alot of issues that are important to millennials. Maybe they should look at the numbers and start owning some of those Issues otherwise they are a dying party.

Reply
Jul 10, 2014 20:02:13   #
AuntiE Loc: 45th Least Free State
 
just chris wrote:
Sure sounds like the GOP is on the wrong side of alot of issues that are important to millennials. Maybe they should look at the numbers and start owning some of those Issues otherwise they are a dying party.


I have some interaction with a number of millennials. It is my experience they are more liberal on L**T issues but divided on pro/choice/life (last phrase done alphabetically).

Reply
Jul 10, 2014 20:52:16   #
just chris
 
AuntiE wrote:
I have some interaction with a number of millennials. It is my experience they are more liberal on L**T issues but divided on pro/choice/life (last phrase done alphabetically).


Thats true and they don't seem to carry alot of the prejudices we grew up with. They have access to a world of information an don't rely on something they heard but instead goggle it, there by helping them make an informed opinion.

Reply
Jul 10, 2014 20:57:20   #
AuntiE Loc: 45th Least Free State
 
just chris wrote:
Thats true and they don't seem to carry alot of the prejudices we grew up with. They have access to a world of information an don't rely on something they heard but instead goggle it, there by helping them make an informed opinion.


They, also, do not restrict themselves to a single source. They tend to seek several sources to see a variety of sides. I think that is beneficial.

Reply
 
 
Jul 10, 2014 20:58:21   #
VladimirPee
 
But the information they receive most likely comes from a left wing source whether it be a teacher in school or MTV or Jon Stewart and Colbert


just chris wrote:
Thats true and they don't seem to carry alot of the prejudices we grew up with. They have access to a world of information an don't rely on something they heard but instead goggle it, there by helping them make an informed opinion.

Reply
Jul 10, 2014 21:00:24   #
Kirk
 
AuntiE wrote:
http://reason.com/poll/2014/07/10/reason-rupe-2014-millennial-survey

Millennials Think Government Is Inefficient, Abuses Its Power, and Supports Cronyism

But young Americans also want government to guarantee health insurance and living wages; plan to v**e for Democrats in 2014 and 2016

Read the full report here
Read the toplines here
10 Findings About the Millennial Generation, found here
Find charts from the report, compiled here
Read detailed tables/crosstabs of the results here
Survey methodology described here
Emily Ekins discusses millennials with ReasonTV here, and here


A Reason-Rupe survey of 2,000 Americans between the ages of 18 and 29 finds 66 percent of millennials believe government is inefficient and wasteful — a substantial increase since 2009, when just 42 percent of millennials said government was inefficient and wasteful.

Nearly two-thirds of millennials, 63 percent, think government regulators favor special interests, whereas just 18 percent feel regulators act in the public’s interest. Similarly, 58 percent of 18-to-29 year-olds are convinced government agencies abuse their powers, while merely 25 percent trust government agencies to do the right thing.

The Reason-Rupe report finds this skepticism of government has millennials favoring general reductions to government spending and regulations:

73 percent of millennials favor allowing private accounts for Social Security; 51 percent favor private accounts even it means cutting Social Security benefits for current and future retirees because 53 percent of millennials say Social Security is unlikely to exist when they retire
64 percent of millennials say cutting government spending by 5 percent would help the economy
59 percent say cutting taxes would help the economy
57 percent prefer a smaller government providing fewer services with low taxes, while 41 percent prefer a larger government providing more services with high taxes
57 percent want a society where wealth is distributed according to achievement
55 percent say reducing regulations would help the economy
53 percent say reducing the size of government would help the economy
74 percent of millennials say government has a responsibility to guarantee every citizen has a place to sleep and enough to eat
However, millennials also support more government action and higher spending in a number of key areas:

71 percent favor raising the federal minimum wage to $10.10 an hour
69 percent say it is government’s responsibility to guarantee everyone access to health care and 51 percent have a favorable view of the Affordable Care Act
68 percent say government should ensure everyone makes a living wage
66 percent say raising taxes on the wealthy would help the economy
63 percent say spending more on job training would help the economy
58 percent say the government should spend more on assistance to the poor even it means higher taxes
57 percent favor spending more money on infrastructure
54 percent favor a larger government that provides more services, when taxes are not mentioned
54 percent want government to guarantee everyone a college education
Sixty-two percent of millennials describe themselves as socially liberal, while 27 percent say they are socially conservative. The gap is much narrower on economic issues, with 49 percent of millennials identifying themselves as economic liberals and 36 percent labeling themselves as economic conservatives.

Millennials’ social liberalism is mixed with strong opposition to many nanny state regulations:

72 percent of millennials say large sugary sodas and drinks should be allowed to be sold
67 percent of millennials favor legalizing same-sex marriage
61 percent say a******n should be legal in all or most cases
61 percent say people should be able to buy foods containing t***s fats
60 percent want to allow e-cigarette use in public places
59 percent say the government should allow online gambling
57 percent say marijuana should be legal, although just 22 percent say cocaine should be legal
52 percent say either the government should not set a legal drinking age or that the legal drinking age should be lower than 21
2014 and 2016 E******ns

Of those registered to v**e, 76 percent of millennials say they plan to v**e in the 2014 midterm e******ns. Fifty-three percent of registered millennials tell Reason-Rupe they plan to v**e for the Democratic congressional candidate in their district this November, while 29 percent intend to v**e for the Republican. For Democrats that’s a sharp decline from the 64 percent of millennials who say they v**ed for President Barack Obama in 2012.

Things look better for Democrats in 2016, however. When asked to select their top choice for president in 2016, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was the top choice of 39 percent of registered millennial v**ers, followed by Sen. Elizabeth Warren (8 percent), Vice President Joe Biden (6 percent) and the top Republican, Rep. Paul Ryan (6 percent). Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee and Sen. Rand Paul were each the top choice of 5 percent of registered millennial v**ers.

A majority of millennials, 52 percent, identify themselves as independents when first asked. Just 16 percent self-identify as Republicans, while 32 percent say they’re Democrats. Including those leaning towards a party, 43 percent of millennials identify as Democrats, 35 percent as independents, and only 23 percent classify themselves as Republicans.

Millennials don’t identify with the political parties and don’t have much confidence in them. When asked who they trust most to handle a series of policy issues, young Americans say they trust “neither” party to handle 12 of 15 issues surveyed. Millennials do trust Democrats the most on gay marriage, the environment, and poverty, while only trusting Republicans the most on promoting entrepreneurship.

About the Reason-Rupe Poll

The Reason-Rupe national poll, executed by YouGov, surveyed 2,000 adults between the ages of 18 and 29 online from February 28 to March 11, 2014. The poll’s margin of error is plus or minus 3.4 percent.

The complete study, “Millennials: The Politically Unclaimed Generation” by Reason-Rupe Polling Director Emily Ekins, is online here (.pdf). Note from AuntiE...the PDF is about 105 pages

This is the latest in a series of Reason-Rupe public opinion surveys dedicated to exploring what Americans really think about government and major issues. This Reason Foundation project is made possible thanks to the generous support of the Arthur N. Rupe Foundation.
http://reason.com/poll/2014/07/10/reason-rupe-2014... (show quote)

This kind of news just tires me out. It's hard to make sense of it. In my circles with my kids, I really try to keep them informed. I will admit my daughter, 24 years, doesn't want to hear about it.

Reply
Jul 10, 2014 21:04:31   #
AuntiE Loc: 45th Least Free State
 
Kirk wrote:
This kind of news just tires me out. It's hard to make sense of it. In my circles with my kids, I really try to keep them informed. I will admit my daughter, 24 years, doesn't want to hear about it.


It has been my experience they hear and understand more then you think. You may not receive the response you seek; however, they do hear you. Part of the reason they do not want to hear is the belief it is all for naught. :(

Reply
Jul 11, 2014 07:52:39   #
Caboose Loc: South Carolina
 
just chris wrote:
Sure sounds like the GOP is on the wrong side of alot of issues that are important to millennials. Maybe they should look at the numbers and start owning some of those Issues otherwise they are a dying party.


Who do you call millennials?

Reply
 
 
Jul 11, 2014 08:22:17   #
VladimirPee
 
Young folks always tend to be more liberal. As they get older they tend to become more conservative.


just chris wrote:
Thats true and they don't seem to carry alot of the prejudices we grew up with. They have access to a world of information an don't rely on something they heard but instead goggle it, there by helping them make an informed opinion.

Reply
Jul 11, 2014 09:22:16   #
Dummy Boy Loc: Michigan
 
AuntiE wrote:
I truly am not being h**eful. The only thing you picked out of all this information was health insurance? :shock:


Yea, looks to me like they believe in Capitalism. They just don't know it.

Reply
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