1 in 3 Voters Would Blame Congressional Republicans for a Shutdown

Sign up to get the latest data and analysis on how business, politics and economics intersect around the world. With days before a potential government shutdown, few voters are highly aware of the potential impasse as House Republicans work to overcome intraparty divisions to fund the government past Sept. 30. However, voters are willing to

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With days before a potential government shutdown, few voters are highly aware of the potential impasse as House Republicans work to overcome intraparty divisions to fund the government past Sept. 30. However, voters are willing to cast blame, and the bulk of it is not yet being directed at House Speaker Kevin McCarthy’s Republican majority. 

According to our survey, just over a third of voters (34%) said Republicans in Congress would be mostly to blame for a government shutdown, while 23% would blame President Joe Biden and 21% would blame Democrats in Congress. Taken together, the latter two figures account for 44% of the electorate, with another 28% unsure. 

As with many things involving the internal gears of Washington, the data also shows that many voters haven’t been paying attention to news out of Capitol Hill in recent weeks about the prospects of a government shutdown even after a bit of a recent uptick, potentially explaining why they have assigned more blame to Biden and his party to date.

Our Sept. 21-24 survey found that less than a quarter of voters (23%) said they had seen, read or heard “a lot” about the potential government shutdown. A similar share (22%) said the same of government funding talks in a separate survey conducted over the weekend, up from 15% the prior week. Democrats, who are usually most likely to hear about mainstream news events, were almost twice as likely as Republicans to say they’d heard a lot about the prospects for a shutdown (31% to 17%). 

In turn, voters who are more aware of the news are more likely to say there’s a risk of a potential government shutdown on Oct. 1 because Republicans are unable to come to an agreement with other Republican lawmakers, but even these voters are willing to cast at least some blame on the other side of the aisle.

Voters who are closely tracking the shutdown news are 21 percentage points more likely to blame Republican infighting for bringing the nation to the brink of a shutdown, while a third blame disagreement between Republicans and Democrats, compared with almost half of the overall electorate. Roughly 1 in 5 voters are not sure who to blame. 

The bottom line

In advance of the Sept. 30 deadline, Republicans have been able to rely on voters’ limited awareness of their own budgetary infighting to keep some of the public’s blame on the other side of the aisle. Some of this is to be expected given partisanship and independent voters’ dislike for the party in power. 

However, the GOP is unlikely to be able to rely on a lack of voter attention to obscure its internal divisions if infighting in the House conference closes the government’s doors. As evidenced by surveys we conducted in 2019 — when then-President Donald Trump shut the government down over his border wall — his side of the aisle took more blame as more Americans became attuned to the news. 

If the government does shut down for any notable period of time, our data suggests it could threaten the modest gains Republicans have made since Biden took office when it comes to voters' perceptions of its ability to govern, according to our annual State of the Parties survey.

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