From Ballotpedia <[email protected]>
Subject 25 percent of voters believe Obamacare improved U.S. healthcare
Date August 20, 2020 12:01 PM
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[link removed]'s_Number_of_the_Day
AUGUST 20, 2020: Twenty-five percent (25%) of voters believe the U.S. healthcare system was broken before Obamacare ([link removed]) and is working much better today. However, a Texas Public Policy Foundation poll found that 21% take the opposite view. They believe our healthcare system was working fine before it was broken by Obamacare ([link removed]) .[1] ([link removed])

However, a solid plurality–39%–don't see much change in either direction.[1] ([link removed]) They believe our healthcare system was broken before Obamacare ([link removed]) was passed and it is still broken today. Fourteen percent (14%) of voters are not sure.[1] ([link removed])

Democrats are fairly evenly divided between thinking things are better now and that little has changed. Republicans are fairly evenly divided between thinking things are worse now and that little has changed. A plurality of independent voters believe the system was broken before Obamacare ([link removed]) and remains broken today.[1] ([link removed])

Younger voters are somewhat more likely than their elders to believe little has changed.[1] ([link removed])

Click here to view the Number of the Day online→ ([link removed])
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Each weekday, Scott Rasmussen’s Number of the Day ([link removed])  explores interesting and newsworthy topics at the intersection of culture, politics, and technology. Columns published on Ballotpedia reflect the views of the author.
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_Scott Rasmussen is an editor-at-large for Ballotpedia, the Encyclopedia of American Politics. He is a senior fellow for the study of self-governance at the King’s College in New York. His most recent book, ** Politics Has Failed: America Will Not ([link removed])
** , ([link removed])
was published by the Sutherland Institute in August 2018._
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