Large majorities of Americans back coronavirus restrictions, slower return to normal: POLL - Anxiety over the coronavirus is still steep, the ABC News/Ipsos survey shows.

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Overwhelming majorities of Americans favor restrictions related to containing the coronavirus and fear moving too quickly to reopen the economy – concerns that break through party lines amid a national unease about the pandemic, according to a new ABC News/Ipsos poll released Friday.

Just over eight in 10 Americans are concerned about contracting the virus, a number that has held steady in polling the last few weeks.

In this week’s poll, 72% believe moving too quickly to loosen the stay-at-home orders is a greater threat to the country than moving too slowly, and 86% think social distancing and stay-at-home orders are responsible policies. And if restrictions were lifted tomorrow, some 80% say they are unlikely to go out to public places that are likely to draw crowds.

In the new poll, conducted by Ipsos in partnership with ABC News using Ipsos’ Knowledge Panel, anxiety over the coronavirus is still steep – as concern over getting the deadly disease hovers around the low eighties for the second week in a row. Only slightly more than one-quarter of Americans believe moving too slowly to ease restrictions poses a greater danger to the country, with more jobs being lost, than moving too quickly.

A meager 14% of Americans think stay-at-home orders constrict personal liberty, and only one in five said if restrictions were lifted the next day, they would likely go out in public.

Even majorities of those identifying with President Donald Trump's own party favorably view the current status quo and are more resistant to sudden changes. About three-quarters of Republicans are concerned about becoming infected, 53% support a slower return to normal, and 72% said they were unlikely to return to public places if restrictions were relaxed immediately.

More surprising, perhaps, is the 82% of Republicans who align with the view that social distancing and stay-at-home orders are responsible, life-saving actions, while only 17% believe the restrictive measures are a government overreaction that infringes on an individual's freedom.

That number comes against the backdrop of scattered demonstrations across the country, organized by protesters angry by the rigid stay-at-home orders in place as a response to the coronavirus, which has forced millions to claim unemployment benefits and ground most economic activity to a halt.

A potentially record-setting demonstration is on the horizon, as thousands are expected to protest outside Wisconsin's state capital in Madison on Friday.

Even as Trump alternates between openly encouraging the protests and breaking with one of his allies, Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, over a sudden timeframe for reopening businesses in his state, the country believes the drastic efforts to contain and control the spread of COVID-19 are appropriate.

Partisan colors still show with Democrats being more likely to be worried about the outbreak (87%), back the stringent limitations on daily life, such as social distancing and the emergency orders issued by the nation's governors (98%), and believe that moving too quickly is a threat to the country's progress (92%). And 92% of Democrats also said they are unlikely to go out in public under immediate loosened restrictions.

The new survey also finds that independents largely trace the views of the country, with a near 80%-20% margin across the board on each question.

Among independents, 80% are concerned about contracting the virus, compared to 20% who are not; 72% see more risk for the country in moving too quickly than too slowly (28%); 80% support social distancing and the stay-at-home orders, compared to 20% who believe they are a government overreach; and 76% say they would be unlikely to leave home, compared to 24% who said they would be likely, if those emergency measures were instantly lifted.

This ABC News/Ipsos poll was conducted by Ipsos Public Affairs‘ KnowledgePanel® April 22-23, 2020, in English and Spanish, among a random national sample of 506 adults. Results have a margin of sampling error of 5.6 points, including the design effect. See the poll’s topline results and details on the methodology here.
 
>polls say

Tell those same people there won't be any more stimulus packages after this first $1200. See if they still support it then.
 
Poll conducted by media agrees with media narrative. Shocking.

I like the bit about asking people whether the measures saved lives but doesn't ask why they think it did so. It is not in their interest to shine a light on people being misinformed and why.
 
In the new poll, conducted by Ipsos in partnership with ABC News using Ipsos’ Knowledge Panel, anxiety over the coronavirus is still steep – as concern over getting the deadly disease hovers around the low eighties for the second week in a row. Only slightly more than one-quarter of Americans believe moving too slowly to ease restrictions poses a greater danger to the country, with more jobs being lost, than moving too quickly.

Is this one of those quick polls on a news website? Those are biased as hell. I mean, Kiwi Farms does polls but no one's trumpeting "79% OF INTERNET USERS WOULD RATHER HAVE SEX WITH A DEAD TARANTULA THAN A TRANSGENDER PERSON", are they now?
 
Is this one of those quick polls on a news website? Those are biased as hell. I mean, Kiwi Farms does polls but no one's trumpeting "79% OF INTERNET USERS WOULD RATHER HAVE SEX WITH A DEAD TARANTULA THAN A TRANSGENDER PERSON", are they now?
I don't know, here's the official site (archive)
Ensuring accuracy with an industry leading representative random sample, exceptional response rates and coverage

KnowledgePanel has been at the forefront of conducting online research for more than two decades. Backed by scientific design, statistical rigor and sector expertise, it provides consistently high-quality measurement.

KnowledgePanel is the largest probability-based online panel in the U.S.—with about 55,000 members. Our research capability spans all industries from public health to commercial services and products. We have the most experienced analysts and online panel research team in the industry. And, with thousands of profile variables, we can reach all with the cost benefit of online survey administration without sacrificing accuracy.
With address-based sampling (ABS), KnowledgePanel provides a statistically valid representation of the U.S. population as well as many difficult-to-survey populations:
  • cellphone-only households
  • African Americans
  • Latinos
  • young adults (ages 15+)
Rigorous design, superior coverage, panel size and sound methodology make KnowledgePanel® the most suitable choice for a broad range of commercial, academic, and governmental applications.
The key design advantages of KnowledgePanel
  • We address self-selection bias by choosing respondents. Our efficient sample design uses a single sampling frame: the Delivery Sequence File (DSF) of the United States Postal Service, covering almost 100% of the U.S. population.
  • We address participant fatigue by ensuring minimal survey burden. Panelists take on average two KnowledgePanel surveys a month, minimizing respondent fatigue and attrition. Our research has highlighted a stark difference in the burden on KnowledgePanel members compared to opt-in participants:
Panel Hygiene
Number of surveys in a typical month from all sources:

We would like to think about surveys you take online over the internet. About how many ONLINE surveys would you estimate that you complete in a typical month?

Panel Hygiene


About 80+ percent of KP members only belong to KnowledgePanel. The same stat of solo panel membership for Opt-in samples is at 33.

  • We address mode bias. Mixed-mode effects have been found with dual-mode online and telephone methods. KnowledgePanel provides non-internet households with a netbook and internet service to enable a single mode of data collection. The example below highlights the impact of mode on the responses of similar demographic groups:
Do you favor or oppose providing a legal way for illegal immigrants already in the country to become citizen?


  • We address coverage of U.S. Hispanics. You no longer need to rely on expensive and problematic methods when conducting Hispanic research. KnowledgePanel Latino has reinvented research to meet the needs of the online survey age without sacrificing population representation and the sound sampling principles you expect. We uniquely cover about 93% of U.S. Latino households. This encompasses Spanish- and English-dominant and bilingual households alike, as well as U.S. Latinos who do not have access to the internet at least occasionally.
  • We address non-response bias. We lead the online research industry in terms of the proportion of the respondent pool that actually participates in our research. This is partly the result of our efforts to “convert” non-responders.
  • We can calibrate. KnowledgePanel Calibration meets the needs of studies involving either exceptionally large sample sizes or the targeting of very small subpopulations/local geographies. This blended web sample approach is an effective methodology when compared to conducting the survey exclusively with non-probability opt-in panels. When calibrated, the combined sample sources—KnowledgePanel and opt-in online samples—result in higher accuracy over the use of an opt-in sample alone.
We know our panelists. We maintain an extensive, multi-year database of more than 2,000 profile variables based on survey respondents. Updated annually, the database is used to identify unique subgroups that are otherwise unattainable online. With the breadth of Ipsos KnowledgePanel profiles, we are able to:

  • target the specific survey respondents you need, so that you don’t need to waste valuable time in your custom survey
  • integrate analytic value from profile packages— this might include, but is not limited to, information about political affairs, lifestyle, media, shopping habits, financial views, technological sophistication and more
  • create custom panels based on collected characteristics, behaviors and attitudes of Ipsos KnowledgePanel members, eliminating the cost of newly recruiting a panel
Ipsos expertise applied
We believe that the true value to you of working with our company lies in the knowledge of our people and having their know-how and creativity, motivation and commitment applied to your needs. KnowledgePanel alone cannot tell a story, provide actionable recommendations or create the best survey or sample design to find them either, but Ipsos’ experts can. Our team members combine and apply their industry experience and specialist knowledge to every project—so you can be assured you’ll not only receive the best survey/sample design but the best insight on which to act too.

Understanding the public sector
Ipsos KnowledgePanel is the trusted source of relevant public opinion information that enables its clients to make smarter decisions. Our experts combine their passion with Ipsos’ long-standing data science experience. This allows us to deliver vital global insights matched with local intelligence from more than 100 countries. By using innovative technologies and data sciences, we turn big data into smart data, enabling its clients to address critical concerns in public policy, health policy and services, epidemiology, environmental protection, political science, sociology, social psychology, and many other fields.
 
You know guys, maybe instead of going all in one on side or the other, maybe we could try to find some common ground that works for everyone instead? Like maybe getting some people back to work but making sure they're probably equipt to be protect against the virus. Maybe give employee's and managers some extra incentive to uphold safety practices?

No? Let's just keep arguing and calling each other names? O.K...
 
Is this one of those quick polls on a news website? Those are biased as hell. I mean, Kiwi Farms does polls but no one's trumpeting "79% OF INTERNET USERS WOULD RATHER HAVE SEX WITH A DEAD TARANTULA THAN A TRANSGENDER PERSON", are they now?
It's a survey taken on a "get paid to" panel website that usually pays people like $0.10 - $0.50 per survey, sort of like swagbucks, instagc, etc. Participants typically grind out surveys all day and are motivated to give the answers that they sense the company posting the surveys wants them to give (they often get disqualified otherwise).
 
I just got the call that I get to go back to work Monday, I'll tell you how I feel....


Hint: You don't need a poll to figure it out.
 
CNN Poll:
Do you favor going back to work on Monday and LITERALLY dying?
Or staying home and getting bernie bucks to watch netflix?

CNN results:
Most Americans want to play it safe
 
You know guys, maybe instead of going all in one on side or the other, maybe we could try to find some common ground that works for everyone instead? Like maybe getting some people back to work but making sure they're probably equipt to be protect against the virus. Maybe give employee's and managers some extra incentive to uphold safety practices?

No? Let's just keep arguing and calling each other names? O.K...
That takes work. Get that ass banned.
 
Is this one of those quick polls on a news website? Those are biased as hell. I mean, Kiwi Farms does polls but no one's trumpeting "79% OF INTERNET USERS WOULD RATHER HAVE SEX WITH A DEAD TARANTULA THAN A TRANSGENDER PERSON", are they now?
Did we have a poll about that? Did it include Live Tarantula, just as a control?

also, I’m so jealous @TowinKarz . We just got informed our company will be enforcing mandatory work from home restrictions for at least 3 more MONTHS.
 
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