About two-thirds Americans feel that “big, beautiful bills” will do more to help rich people, According For a new AP-NORC pole.
This includes 48 percent Republican, 60 percent independents and 83 percent of Democrats, which was released on Friday.
Bill expands several tax cuts pass During the first term of President Trump by Republican in 2017, with significant deduction in welfare services. Democrats have attacked the law as a historical transfer of money from the poor to the rich.
Sixty percent of the Americans also said that the law would do more to hurt people with low income.
However, both sides were divided on the question of low -income Americans. Less than a third of the Republican said that the bill will be more to damage people with low income than 90 percent of Democrats.
Democrats are expecting medicades, supplementary nutrition assistance programs (SNAP), and other government support programs to use bill cuts as the major message during the upcoming 2026 midterms. The impact of the bill on low -income Americans, however, may take several years to show.
Medicids cut the deepest funding of the bill, resulting in millions of people to lose their insurance in the next 10 years, kick in By 2028, although work requirements may begin by the end of 2026. Changes in SNAP will also not be effective till 2028.
Bill has criticized for its long -term additions to national debt, which is estimated to be in trillions. Many economists have Expressed concern At a time, about its cost when government expenses were already considered unstable in a long time.
In the survey released on Friday, Trump’s approval to handle government expenditure increased to 38 percent, compared to 46 percent from the AP-NORC pole in March.
About two-thirds Americans feel that the government is spending a lot, in an agreement with Republicans and Democrats, according to the pole.
Pol surveyed 1,437 adults between July 10 and July 14, with a difference of 3.6 percent marks.