Public wants more enforcement of laws and regs, new poll shows
With near unanimity, voters believe there should be tougher enforcement of existing laws and rules, and they should be enforced fairly, without regard to the wealth or power of violators, a new poll released this week by the Coalition for Sensible Safeguards shows.
In fact, regulatory agencies – including the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) – are a great deal more popular than Congress, despite efforts by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and others to vilify the work of those agencies, according to the coalition.
“I was pleased to see the public’s strong support for OSHA (57 percent expressed a favorable opinion of OSHA) and tougher safety and health enforcement,” said Ross Eisenbrey, vice president of the Economic Policy Institute. “Everyone wants their family to be safe when they go to work.”
Support for rules – and their enforcement – is overwhelming among both Democrats and Republicans, men and women, and in every region of the country, according to the poll. Voters demand a critical role for enforcement to ensure clean water and air, and the safety of drugs and food imported from other countries.
“If voters are frustrated about regulations, it is because they want more enforcement of the rules, not less,” said Robert Weissman, president of Public Citizen. “They want to see companies that pollute our water and poison our food, crash our economy and endanger our lives brought to heel.”
“For years, the media has accepted a conservative story that Americans are anti-regulation. In fact, many opinion polls show voters understand and want the benefits that regulations provide – clean water, clean air, safe food – but are allergic to the word ‘regulation,’ ” said Katherine McFate, president of the Center for Effective Government. “In this poll, voters’ views are clear: They want rules against corporate misbehavior, and they want them uniformly enforced. They believe everyone should do business under the same set of rules. It’s a question of basic fairness.”
The poll was commissioned by the Bauman Foundation and conducted by Lake Research Partners, which conducted a live telephone survey of 700 likely 2016 voters nationwide between July 21 and July 28. The numbers of Democrats, Republicans and Independents polled reflected the proportions of projected likely national 2016 voters from each of those parties. The poll’s margin of error is +/- 3.7 percent. In addition, Lake Research Partners conducted two focus groups in Columbus, Ohio, on June 3.