Polls suggest Americans not anti-trade, but want help in adjusting to it
WASHINGTON — An influx of new polling suggests Americans aren’t especially interested in turning back the clock on globalization — but do want policies that help American workers compete in the international-trade era.
A massive survey released Tuesday by Pew Research provides a glimpse into the American psyche as the president threatens to scrap trade deals, including the 23-year-old NAFTA agreement.
The 5,000-person triennial survey breaks American voters down into nine types: four brands of conservative, four types of liberal and one category of bystanders with little interest in politics.
It examines their views on a variety of issues and illustrates how the most active partisans tend to have the most extreme politics, giving small subsets of the population the opportunity to dominate large political parties.