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Political Hotsheet
October 11, 2010 4:07 PM

Do Americans Really Want a Smaller Government?

BERJAYA

People attend a tea party protest in Washington, Thursday, April 15, 2010.

(Credit: AP)

As the midterm elections approach, many conservative Americans are making the Tea Party-style argument that the U.S. government should be small, localized, and as personally unobtrusive as possible.

But according to a new survey by The Washington Post, the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation and Harvard University, many who take that position also hold positions inconsistent with a small-government mindset.

The study, which surveyed 2,054 randomly-selected adults between Sept. 22 and Oct. 5, indicates that most Americans who would like to see a more limited government also call Medicare and Social Security "very important" programs, according to the Washington Post. The Post also reports that most of those surveyed want the federal government to remain involved in education, poverty reduction and health care regulation.

A majority of respondents who said they support the Tea Party do object in some way to the current health care reform legislation. But 50 percent or more also supported equal or more federal involvement in areas like poverty reduction.

Overall, the poll found that nine in ten Americans believed issues like Medicare, Social Security, national defense, food stamps, education, unemployment benefits, or environmental protection were at least moderately important.

Despite what appears to be bipartisan support for a number of specific federal programs, members of the GOP spoke negatively about the national government on a broader level. More than four in ten of those polled gave the Washington a grade of "D" or "F," and 80 percent of Republicans said they thought the government's priorities were misplaced.

Fifty-five percent of all voters thought national leadership was ignoring major issues, and similar percentages said the government is misusing tax money and does not share their values, the Post reports.

A new USA TODAY/Gallup Poll also showed mistrust of the government. Six in ten of those surveyed for that study believed the government is too powerful, and nearly half agreed with the statement: "The federal government poses an immediate threat to the rights and freedom of ordinary citizens."

Legislating health care was the most frequently invoked example of "something the federal government is doing that it shouldn't be doing," with 18 percent citing it. But the same poll indicates that nearly six in ten think the government should ensure that all Americans are granted adequate health care.

Public opinion on the effectiveness of federal programs has ultimately not changed very much in the last ten years, numbers indicate. According to the Post, "perhaps the biggest change over the past decade is the growing partisan gap."


Lucy Madison
Lucy Madison is a political reporter for CBSNews.com. You can read more of her posts here. Follow Hotsheet on Facebook and Twitter.
Tags:
Government ,
Medicare ,
Health Care Reform ,
Tea Party
Topics:
Campaign 2010 ,
Polling ,
Domestic Issues

Add a Comment See all 114 Comments
by mmac47 October 14, 2010 11:25 AM EDT
With unemployment hovering near 10 percent nearly two years after President Obama signed his economic stimulus package, Mr. Obama is acknowledging that, despite his campaign promises, "there's no such thing as shovel-ready projects."
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by Amusedbyitall October 14, 2010 9:18 AM EDT
A smaller government means an increase in unemployment. This is a fact neither for or against smaller government. I believe that what Americans really want is a more effecient government.
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by mmac47 October 14, 2010 11:28 AM EDT
well we have the biggest govt in the history of the u.s. right now. The unemployment has increased from 7.2% to 9.6% since the big govt theory has been put in place by obama.
by actornaught October 14, 2010 2:39 PM EDT
Private sector jobs have grown for the ninth straight month. All the lost jobs have been in public sector, your Smaller Government is happening NOW. Wake up, "conservatives"...
by Ms_enza October 14, 2010 8:25 AM EDT
We can't afford a smaller government.
Reply to this comment
by mmac47 October 14, 2010 11:30 AM EDT
hmmmmmmmmm I have 13 trillion reasons why you are wrong.
by magnumdr October 14, 2010 7:17 AM EDT
It isn't about a smaller Government. It si all about these people becomeing rich by serving in a public office. In a time before this people would go into politics because they wanted to make America a better place for all of us and the money was noy importany at all. Now it is all about the money and benefits.
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by YourRearViewMirror1 October 13, 2010 5:10 PM EDT
NEW EASY GUARANTEED WAY TO GET POLITICALLY REWARDED IN AMERICA!.......Destroy the Economy so Bad that nobody No Party can Recover it within 20 months.....GW Bush is a Genius.
Reply to this comment
by UForgotPoland October 13, 2010 4:22 PM EDT
A world Super Power cannot operate with a small Government, sorry. Also termination of Government programs is extremely costly and results in further job losses. All the money that ever went into that program to train staff, supply it, and organize it would be just lost. Plus the legal challenges that would be brought up by individuals who wish to preserve the given program also isn't cheap.
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by mmac47 October 14, 2010 11:31 AM EDT
Why couldnt it?
by wakeup2020 October 13, 2010 6:31 AM EDT
Every MONTH for the last 9 months Obama has created 10s of thousands of private sector jobs. 95,000 per month on average. Yet the corporate run media has reported job losses. How you ask? Because they subtract the government job losses form the private sector job gains. In fact all of the jobs losses are because the republicans are getting their way. They are reducing the size of government ie fewer teachers, policemen, fire fighters etc. This is what "smaller government" looks like. Enjoy teabag morons. BTW in eight years Bush and his tax cuts for the rich did not create a single private sector job. He lost 673,000 private sector jobs in 8 years.
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by actornaught October 12, 2010 9:18 PM EDT
Smaller Government is one of the longest running republican Lying Points, and most heinious vote stealing strategies. They get in power, borrow stunning amounts of future middle class taxes, and throw that money at the wealthy. Phony cons are so convinced it sounds good they never want to take notice how much they count on government.
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by mmac47 October 14, 2010 11:32 AM EDT
They get in power, borrow stunning amounts of future middle class taxes, and throw that money at the wealthy. Are you talking about the democrats?
by Cattzen October 12, 2010 1:39 PM EDT
I believe that most Americans would want a Government that WORKS! and, not the policy of "NO!" to everything that would benefit Americans. Are the GOP part of the solution? or, just the PROBLEM???
Reply to this comment
by mmac47 October 14, 2010 11:24 AM EDT
wrong. Most americans want smaller govt.
by slatep October 12, 2010 12:46 PM EDT
Yo bet your sweet bippy we want less government control. Government has intruded everywhere in our lives from what kind of toilets we can use to dictating the kind of light bulbs we can use in our lamps. This is not to mention taking control of what kind of television we are being forced to watch. Little black boxes.! I wonder what other functions these little black boxes have.? The government should focus on the real problems we have in this Country. Corruption is rampant, Congress is bought and paid for, our President doesn't have a clue. After Congress and the President have solved the "major" problems (the economy, joblessness, hunger, foreclosures and start enforcing the laws we currently have to protect us from major disasters (mining accidents, the oil spill, pollution from carbon emissions from our cars and industry, contamination of our water and food supplies) then they can feel free to invade our bathrooms and tv sets.
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