The majority of older Trump voters believe a house bill imposes an unfair "age tax," oppose changes to medicaid, and want measures to lower cost of prescription drugs.
AARP has released the findings of a survey that said a majority of voters ages 50 plus – including most Trump supporters – oppose specific provisions of the bill that make health care more expensive for older Americans. The survey asked about multiple elements of the health care reform bill and also found that an overwhelming majority want action to lower drug costs.
"Older Americans want affordable health care – including less expensive prescription drugs and continued protections for the most vulnerable," said AARP Executive Vice President Nancy LeaMond. "When Americans over age 50 look at the details of the House health care reform plan, they don't like what they see. They don't want big insurance and drug companies to reap massive profits at their expense."
Specific findings of the survey include:
The survey also highlights that lowering the cost of prescriptions is a top priority for older Trump voters. A significant majority blames big drug companies for rising prices and support measures such as allowing Medicare to negotiate drug prices.
Survey Methodology: Benenson Strategy Group, in conjunction with GS Strategy Group, conducted 605 telephone interviews from March 10-13, 2017, with registered voters ages 50+ nationwide, who voted in the 2016 election. At the 95% confidence level, the margin of error for the entire sample is ± 4.0%. It is ± 5.7% among Trump voters. The full results of the poll may be found here.
(Source: AARP)