Fox News Poll: Socialism gaining ground among voters
Socialism is gaining ground with voters, as half say capitalism is not working and a growing number are open to a shift toward socialism.The latest Fox News survey, released Thursday,...
By Fox News · Fox News
Socialism is gaining ground with voters, as half say capitalism is not working and a growing number are open to a shift toward socialism . The latest Fox News survey, released Thursday, finds a record 38% think it would be a good thing for the United States to move away from capitalism and in the direction of socialism — up from 32% in 2022, the last time the question was asked. In 2010, a low of 18% backed socialism. FOX NEWS POLL: VOTERS GIVE POOR MARKS TO ECONOMY, CONGRESS AND TRUMP Very liberal voters (66%) and Democrats under age 45 (66%) are those most likely to think moving to socialism would be good. More than half of all Democrats (55%), Black voters (55%), and those under age 30 (53%) also favor moving away from capitalism. Still, a majority of 61% think it’s a bad thing to move toward socialism, including large majorities of Republicans (78%), conservatives (75%), men over age 45 (75%), and voters ages 65 and up (75%). The shift may be tied to divided views on capitalism itself. Voters are split over whether capitalism in the United States is working well: 51% say it’s working very or somewhat well, while nearly as many, 49%, say it’s working not very or not at all well. FOX NEWS POLL: VIEWS ARE DIVIDED ON US ACTION AGAINST IRAN Plus, equal shares say capitalism is working "very" well and "not at all" well (18% each). The biggest supporters of capitalism are Republican men (87% working very/somewhat well), MAGA supporters (85%), and Republicans ages 45+ (81%). In contrast, very liberal voters (79% working not very/not at all well), Democratic women (79%), and Democrats under age 45 (72%) are those most likely to give it poor marks. These findings seem to suggest frustration with the current system more than a clear preference for expanded government. When it comes to whether they would like the government to "lend me a hand" or "leave me alone" voters are again split: 48% opt for a hand up, while 51% prefer to be left alone — a 3 percentage-point edge fo…