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President Trump and Dr. Deborah Birx, the White Home coronavirus response coordinator, throughout Wednesday’s each day briefing.
A brand new ballot exhibits a dip in Republican assist for stay-at-home orders.
Whilst some Republican governors take steps to reopen their states’ economies, most People stay cautious of the virus’s menace and are prepared to remain residence to cease its unfold, polls present.
However a shift in sentiment is happening, significantly amongst Republicans — most of whom now say the worst is most definitely behind us, based on a Kaiser Family Foundation poll released today.
While 51 percent of Americans said they thought the worst days of the pandemic still lay ahead, including nearly two-thirds of Democrats, a slim majority of Republicans said the opposite. That represents a change from late March, when another Kaiser poll found that two-thirds of Republicans expected things to get worse before getting better.
When it comes to shelter-in-place restrictions, most Americans in the new poll said they remained worthwhile; that was true across party lines. Even in states with Republican governors — who have generally been more willing to entertain lifting restrictions, and eight of whom never ordered statewide limitations at all — support remains relatively high for stay-at-home orders, regardless of respondents’ party affiliation.
Yet two in five Republicans nationwide now say that these kinds of restrictions are an unnecessary burden and are causing more harm than good. That makes Republicans more than twice as likely as independents — and exponentially more likely than Democrats — to express disillusionment with the restrictions.
The mixed feelings of everyday Republicans reflected in the Kaiser poll are mirrored by the conflicting messages coming from national and state leaders. Trump has repeatedly encouraged governors to make their own decisions on when to reopen, and he has said he hopes that it can happen soon. But after Brian Kemp, the governor of Georgia, announced plans this week to reopen, Trump criticized him, saying, “I think it’s too soon.”
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