Democrats have another infrastructure problem – POLITICO – POLITICO

Posted: July 27, 2022 at 11:33 am

Given that tortured backstory, Democrats said they were hardly surprised that voters knew so little about their prized infrastructure bill. Some lamented that their own party hasnt done enough to promote it.

We were so focused on passing the next thing, we forgot to tell people about it. And thats a huge mistake, said Rep. Scott Peters (D-Calif.). We passed a historic, bipartisan infrastructure bill. And why we werent crooning about that from minute one is still a mystery to me.

Rep. Scott Peters (D-Calif.) speaks with members of the press outside the White House.|Patrick Semansky/AP Photo

While House Democrats collectively held over 1,000 events to promote the bill, the polling shows it didnt resonate with most people. Roughly one-third of voters said they believed it was still being worked on in Congress, while 9 percent believed it was not being worked on in Congress and will not be passed. About 37 percent said they didnt know the status of the package at all.

There was a bright spot in the data for Democrats: Pollsters said the trend could be reversed before this falls midterms if the party can harness the right message. They found that voters support for the infrastructure bill reaches 80 percent after learning about whats in it Democrats just have to reach them first.

In selling this legislation, the first order of business is to remind, inform, and convince voters that it is now law, Third Way analysts, from a polling firm that worked for Bidens campaign, wrote in a memo.

The poll, which included 2,000 likely voters from across the country, found that the bills biggest programs were also its biggest selling points. Nearly 8 in 10 people said they believed it was extremely or very important to have better roads with fewer potholes, as well as high-quality water. Sixty-five percent of people felt the same about improving high-speed internet.

But the pollsters cautioned that Democrats shouldnt try to pitch the bill as a solution for all problems. For instance, it found that voters dont believe politicians promises that the bill will fight inflation or climate change. Instead, they advised Democrats to stick to the basics: Better roads, cleaner water, and faster internet made with American products and built by American workers is what this bill is about and what sells.

Another message that worked: Attacking Republicans for voting against the broadly popular bill.

The memo found that swing voters were much less likely to support a Republican as the result of a message attacking GOP lawmakers for siding with Big Oil on the bill. Voters also said they were less likely to support Republicans after viewing negative messages that called out GOP members who took credit for local project funding that came from an infrastructure bill they voted against.

Party arms like the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee have already leaned into that type of attack, which theyve dubbed vote no, take the dough. But many Democrats believe their party needs to do more.

Weve not done a good job with that. I never understood why we would not be running an ad against every single Republican who didnt vote for the infrastructure bill, said Rep. Tom Malinowski (D-N.J.).

Rep. Tom Malinowski (D-N.J.) speaks during a House Foreign Affairs Committee hearing.|Stefani Reynolds-Pool/Getty Images

Other centrist Democrats said the polling should also act as a general warning about their strategy. These centrists complained the party tended to move quickly past more modest achievements, like last months bipartisan gun deal, rather than laud them as significant progress.

Instead, those Democrats argue, some in their party push for more sweeping bills with no chance at becoming law in the current Congress like a ban on so-called assault weapons to demonstrate ongoing pressure to base voters.

Centrist Rep. Kurt Schrader (D-Ore.) said hes worried some of his Democratic colleagues will do the same thing if theyre able to pass a bill this summer that would allow the government to negotiate drug prices with Medicare. Thats a long-held priority for the party, but the rest of the proposed legislation has significantly shrunk compared to earlier iterations that also aimed to address climate change and taxes frustrating progressives.

Were going to have the same problem on prescription drugs, mark my words, Schrader said. When the prescription drug bill comes out, it passes, the Democrats are gonna go well, Thats great, but ... The average person is gonna go, But? That means its not that good, isnt it? And thats not true. Its a great, great bill.

The Third Way and Impact Research poll was conducted online from June 2 to June 9, with a margin of error of 2.2 percentage points.

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Democrats have another infrastructure problem - POLITICO - POLITICO

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