Workforce and Apprenticeship: What Voters Really Want
Voters Back Skilled Trades, Apprenticeships, and a New Path Forward.
Voters Back Skilled Trades, Apprenticeships, and a New Path Forward.
Rising electricity bills divide Americans on energy’s future. Opinions on renewables vary, reflecting a desire for affordable, reliable, and cleaner power.
Americans are dissatisfied with how the shutdown ended, but blame is divided across both parties — and the episode appears unlikely to shift the 2026 elections.
Americans want the government reopened quickly — and support a targeted filibuster reform focused on budgets to end Washington gridlock.
Inflation and affordability far outpace every other voter concern heading into 2026. Voters across all demographics — especially millennials — say Washington needs to make the cost of living its top priority.
While most Americans support celebrating Columbus Day, many—especially Democrats and Gen Z—favor replacing it with Indigenous People’s Day. Despite differences, most voters want to honor history’s achievements without erasing its complexity.
Once told Republicans passed a clean bill to reopen government at current spending levels, blame shifts to Democrats. Most voters say reopening is important—but not if it means more spending.
Most now say the U.S. should push to end the fighting quickly, and a growing share say U.S. and Israeli policies are the cause of terrorism.
Americans overwhelmingly oppose more spending but also prioritize keeping the government open—leaving both parties in a bind.
We are looking at the One Big Beautiful Bill (OBBB) and what advocates must do between now and the 2026 election to run and win on it.