TO: Interested Parties FROM: Amy Levin, Benenson Strategy Group RE: Recent Polling for the Fairness Project DATE: April 7, 2020

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TO: Interested Parties FROM: Amy Levin, Benenson Strategy Group RE: Recent Polling for the Fairness Project DATE: April 7, 2020 TO: Interested Parties FROM: Amy Levin, Benenson Strategy Group RE: Recent Polling for The Fairness Project DATE: April 7, 2020 Benenson Strategy Group conducted a 20-minute national survey among 1481 likely voters using BSG’s proprietary SMS Research Methodology. The survey fielded from March 22-24, 2020. The margin of error is ±2.5% at the 95% confidence level. ➢ When it comes to the federal government’s pandemic response, voters are largely united in the belief that workers and families must come first. When asked which should be “a higher priority for the President and Congress to provide financial support to,” an overwhelming 81% of voters said low-income families and workers, compared to just 19% who said businesses and industries. ➢ There is clear agreement across the partisan spectrum that federal funds should go to sick leave and financial support for workers, not bailouts for big business. Nearly 9 out of 10 voters want the federal government to spend more money “helping cover sick leave for workers and ensuring families can pay the bills” than on “helping affected industries and businesses like airlines, hotels and restaurants.” This includes 98% of Democrats, 88% of Independents and 78% of Republicans who all prioritize sick leave and financial support for families over business/industry support. ➢ Americans want these solutions for the long term, not just a short-term fix. 79% of voters support “passing a national, permanent paid sick leave policy that guarantees all American workers a minimum number of paid sick days” – including 97% of Democrats, 77% of Independents and 63% of Republicans. ➢ Even early in this crisis, before our reliance on minimum wage workers came into such stark relief, there was already strong support for a $15 minimum wage. 60% of voters support increasing the national minimum wage in the United States to $15 an hour. N E W Y O R K | WASHINGTON DC | LOS ANGELES | D E N V E R | BSGCO.COM .
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