Voters Rate Political Corruption as America’s Biggest Crisis
Written by Scott Rasmussen
Fifty-three percent of voters believe political corruption is a crisis in the United States, while another 36 percent believe it is a significant problem but not a crisis.
That’s consistent with other ScottRasmussen.com polling data showing that 87 percent of voters nationwide believe corruption is widespread in the federal government. Solid majorities believe there is also corruption in state (70 percent) and local (57 percent) government.
The belief that our nation has a political corruption crisis is shared by 53 percent of women, 52 percent of men, 51 percent of white voters, 55 percent of black and Hispanic voters, 54 percent of rural voters, 53 percent of suburban voters and 52 percent of urban voters. This is truly an issue that cuts across partisan and demographic lines.
In fact, given a list of 10 challenges facing the nation, political corruption was rated as a crisis by more voters than any other issue. Forty-three percent consider illegal immigration a crisis, 40 percent say the same about government deficits, and 39 percent believe global warming/climate change is a crisis.
The ScottRasmussen.com national survey also found that 33 percent consider poverty a crisis, 30 percent say the same about racism, 29 percent believe the student loan debt is a crisis, 27 percent think that describes economic inequality, 22 percent believe it applies to overregulation and 18 percent to sexism.
Recognition of political corruption as the nation’s biggest crisis shouldn’t be much of a surprise, considering the ongoing political debates. On one side, many voters believe that President Donald Trump was elected to clean up the swamp. On the other side, many believe the president is more corrupt than other politicians.
But the perception of political corruption as a crisis goes deeper than attitudes about the president:
— A majority of voters (54 percent) believe it’s likely that their own representative in Congress trades votes for cash.
— Just 23 percent believe their own representative is the best person for the job.
— Two-thirds of voters (67 percent) believe that big businesses and government regulators often work together to create rules that are harmful and unfair to consumers.
— An overwhelming majority of voters — 82 percent — believe that the top leaders of federal regulatory agencies often use their position to pursue their own personal agenda and impose their standards on the rest of the nation.
— At the federal level, just 21 percent believe that government contracts are generally issued to the best company for the job. Seventy-nine percent believe contracts are awarded to the firms with the best contacts in government.
Put it all together and you have a situation where voters find little hope and much cynicism in the political process.
Only 26 percent of voters think it is even somewhat likely that Congress will successfully address major issues facing the nation before the next election. Just 17 percent now trust the federal government to do the right thing most or all of the time. That hardly sounds like a system where the government enjoys the consent of the governed.
In fact, the system is so broken that 27 percent of voters don’t think anything would be all that different if Hillary Clinton had won the presidential election in 2016.
Perhaps those running for president should focus more on fixing our broken political system and less on making the nation follow a corrupt political system.
Scott Rasmussen is the publisher of ScottRasmussen.com. He is the author of “The Sun Is Still Rising: Politics Has Failed But America Will Not.” To find out more about Scott Rasmussen and to read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.