Gen Z approval up 14 percentage-points

April 7, 2023

Permission to republish original opeds and cartoons granted.

Trump Gets Significant Bump with Younger Voters in Polls – New Data

This week former President Trump made headlines with the news that a New York grand jury had indicted him on criminal charges, but polls show this development has done little to diminish his popularity among his base. In fact, Trump is gaining support from Gen Z and Millennials, who are more likely to say the charges against Trump are politically motivated. The latest YouGov poll conducted in the midst of the unfolding investigation shows Trump’s approval rating is highest among younger voters, and is up by double-digits compared to the same poll last October. Trump's favorability among millennials currently sits at 46%, up 10 percentage-points from 36% in October of last year. His approval with Gen Z currently sits at 49%, up 14 percentage-points from 35% last October. Interestingly, younger voters appear to rally around Trump when he is facing crisis.

Cartoon: Highway From Hell

Is California just a roadside stop on the road to serfdom?

Peak employment holds steady—for now—as the unemployment rate holds at 3.5 percent and hiring slows down

The unemployment rate reported by the Bureau of Labor Statistics was down slightly to 3.5 percent, according to the latest data by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, as peak employment persists in the U.S. ahead of an expected recession. By 2024, the Federal Reserve expects unemployment will be up to 4.6 percent. That implies about 2 million job losses from the current level. One sign of trouble is that hiring slowed down significantly in the establishment survey of employer to 236,000 new jobs, down from 353,000 in January and 266,000 in February. This is reflected in job openings, which are down 17.4 percent off their peak of more than 12 million in March 2022 all the way to 9.9 million. Usually, as a recession washes over the U.S. economy, first hiring slows down and then the job losses begin mounting. The first condition is being met, but it still has more to go. All of the job losses, if they are coming, remain on the horizon.

 

Trump Gets Significant Bump with Younger Voters in Polls – New Data

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By Manzanita Miller  

This week former President Trump made headlines with the news that a New York grand jury had indicted him on criminal charges, but polls show this development has done little to diminish his popularity among his base. In fact, Trump is gaining support from Gen Z and Millennials, who are more likely to say the charges against Trump are politically motivated. 

The latest YouGov poll conducted in the midst of the unfolding investigation shows Trump’s approval rating is highest among younger voters, and is up by double-digits compared to the same poll last October. Trump's favorability among millennials currently sits at 46%, up 10 percentage-points from 36% in October of last year. His approval with Gen Z currently sits at 49%, up 14 percentage-points from 35% last October. 

Interestingly, younger voters appear to rally around Trump when he is facing controversy. YouGov polling shows he enjoyed a rise in support after critics blamed him for the January 6th, 2021 capitol breach.

This data is particularly noteworthy given the prevailing narrative that millennials are overwhelmingly progressive and follow mainstream talking points in lock-step. However, it appears that many younger Americans are able to look past the media's portrayal of the former president and appreciate his accomplishments, such as a booming economy and non-interventionist stance to foreign conflict.

Other recent polls show Trump is significantly more popular with younger voters than presumptive GOP challenger Ron DeSantis. Over half of GOP primary voters eighteen to twenty-nine (51%) have a very or somewhat favorable view of Trump, while just 43% have a very or somewhat favorable view of DeSantis.  Among voters 30 to 44, 49% favor Trump while 36% prefer DeSantis and among voters 45 to 64, Trump leads DeSantis by 7 percentage points. However, voters over 65 prefer DeSantis by 5 percentage points. 

Two-thirds of young GOP primary voters also support Trump becoming the GOP nominee, according to a recent YouGov poll. As shown below, a full 66% of under thirties who lean right say they want Trump to become the GOP nominee in 2024, while between 51% and 56% of all older age groups say the same thing.

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Data from Yahoo News/YouGov

The share of under thirties who want Trump to be the GOP nominee is a full 15 percentage points higher than the share of voters aged 30 to 44 who say the same thing.

This comes on top of recent CNN/SSRS polls showing younger GOP primary voters prioritize restoring the policies of the Trump Administration and avoiding war with Ukraine at higher rates than older voters do. 

Among all prospective GOP primary voters, Trump has also increased his lead over other prospective candidates since news of the indictment broke. A recent Rasmussen Reports poll shows 83% of likely Republican voters approve of Trump's previous job performance.

Trump also leads the field in the latest Trafalgar Group poll by a significant margin. According to the poll, Trump leads his closest rival, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, by a whopping 33 points, with 56 percent support compared to DeSantis' 23 percent.

This marks a significant increase from the previous Trafalgar Group poll which had Trump up by 14 points at 44 percent to 30 percent. While some within the Republican Party have looked to move on from the Trump era, the former President's influence remains strong among the party's base despite his recent legal troubles.   

Trump continues to maintain a strong base of support among economically motivated voters, and polls show many Republicans view the indictment as a politically motivated move by Democrats and the mainstream media to discredit Trump and prevent him from running again. Trump’s increasing popularity with Gen Z and millennials suggests younger voters may be more detached from the 24-hour news cycle and instead prioritize restoring the policies of the Trump Administration.  

Manzanita Miller is an associate analyst at Americans for Limited Government Foundation.

To view online: https://dailytorch.com/2023/04/trump-gets-significant-bump-with-younger-voters-in-polls-new-data/

 

Cartoon: Highway From Hell

By A.F. Branco

Click here for a higher level resolution version.

To view online: https://dailytorch.com/2023/04/cartoon-highway-from-hell/

 

Peak employment holds steady—for now—as the unemployment rate holds at 3.5 percent and hiring slows down

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The unemployment rate reported by the Bureau of Labor Statistics was down slightly to 3.5 percent, according to the latest data by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, as peak employment persists in the U.S. ahead of an expected recession.

By 2024, the Federal Reserve expects unemployment will be up to 4.6 percent. That implies about 2 million job losses from the current level.

One sign of trouble is that hiring slowed down significantly in the establishment survey of employer to 236,000 new jobs, down from 353,000 in January and 266,000 in February.

This is reflected in job openings, which are down 17.4 percent off their peak of more than 12 million in March 2022 all the way to 9.9 million.

Once jobs losses in the household survey begin rising, the unemployment rate will tend to rise as well. But that only seems to happen when job openings crater by more than 20 percent in the JOLT survey on an annual basis, as in the 2001 and 2008-2009 recessions. As of now, on an annual basis, job openings are down 14.4 percent, so there’s definitely still more room for that to fall.

Overall, by 2024, the Federal Reserve expects unemployment will be up to 4.6 percent. That implies about 2 million job losses from the current level.

The number of Americans on continued unemployment claims, not seasonally adjusted has steadily increased to 1.84 million the week of March 25, according to the Department of Labor. Continued unemployment claims are now up by 655,000 since Oct. 2022, when they were 1.19 million. But that’s actually down a little bit, from more than 785,000 just a month ago.

So, the worst is yet to come.

Then there’s inflation, which has been much stickier than many pundits had anticipated, still at 6 percent annualized. Now, with OPEC+ announcing further cuts in global oil production on April 2, oil prices have once again spiked upward — light sweet crude is up to over $80 a barrel again — but that could end up being offset by the weakening demand of the recession.

In the Covid recession, oil producers were unprepared for the sudden drop in demand due to the economic lockdowns and general production halts across all sectors of the global economy as prices went below zero. This time, oil producers appear to be getting ahead of that signal in a bid to keep prices elevated even amid the downturn, expecting much weaker demand, which would also be a recession signal.

Also a sign of weakening demand comes with home values, down 2.5 percent from their high of more than $275,000 in June 2022 to a current level of $268,000 in Feb. 2023, according to the Freddie Mac Home Price Index.

And looking in on interest rates, 30-year mortgages are still quite elevated at 6.28 percent, but are off their highs of more than 7 percent in Nov. 2022. Similarly, 10-year treasuries are back to 3.3 percent, off their recent high of 4.28 percent in Oct. 2022.

Other signs of course include the recent string of bank failure globally as higher interest rates have burnt a hole in banks’ pockets. While it remains to be seen if it will be another full blown financial crisis, this is yet another flashing red light on our consoles.

For the Federal Reserve’s part, it has taken its own interest rate for lending to banks up to 4.75 percent to 5 percent in a bid to tame the inflation after more than $6 trillion was printed, spent and borrowed for Covid, with at least one more rate hike expected this year. But that is still below the consumer inflation rate of 6 percent as the Fed appears reticent to pop the bubble. And yet, with oil picking up yet again, the question is how far annualized inflation will fall to meet up with the Fed’s interest rate posture.

If anything will keep unemployment low, it will be the continued retirement wave by Baby Boomers, the labor shortages of which could offset the worst of the recession. Aging demographics, for example in Japan, kept the unemployment rate to just 3.2 percent during the Covid recession.

Usually, as a recession washes over the U.S. economy, first hiring slows down and then the job losses begin mounting. The first condition is being met, but it still has more to go. All of the job losses, if they are coming, remain on the horizon.

Robert Romano is the Vice President of Public Policy at Americans for Limited Government Foundation.

To view online: https://dailytorch.com/2023/04/peak-employment-holds-steady-for-now-as-the-unemployment-rate-holds-at-3-5-percent-and-hiring-slows-down/

 

 

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