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Our Latest Covid Poll

Americans on the left end of the political spectrum have become less anxious about Covid.

Almost six months ago, when my Morning colleagues and I released our last poll about Covid, the deep anxiety among Americans identifying as “very liberal” was one of the main findings.

Forty-seven percent of very liberal adults said that they believed Covid presented a “great risk” to their own personal health and well-being. That was a significantly larger share than among conservatives, moderates or even liberals who stopped short of calling themselves very liberal. Particularly striking was the level of concern among liberals under age 45, even though the virus’s worst effects have been concentrated among older people.

I understand why attitudes about the virus vary so sharply by ideology. Our country is polarized on most high-profile issues today. In the case of Covid, Donald Trump and some other Republicans exacerbated the divide by making a series of false statements that downplayed the threat or misrepresented the vaccines.

To many liberals, taking Covid seriously — more seriously, at times, than the scientific evidence justified — became an expression of identity and solidarity. As one progressive activist tweeted last year, “The inconvenience of having to wear a mask is more than worth it to have people not think I’m a conservative.”

This morning, we’re releasing the results of our latest Covid poll (which, like the earlier ones, was conducted by Morning Consult). This time, one of the central findings is how much attitudes have changed since the spring. Americans are less worried about the virus today — and driving that decline is the receding level of anxiety among the very liberal, including many younger adults.

The share of the very liberal who say the virus presents a great risk to their own personal health has fallen to 34 percent. The 13-point drop since March was larger than the drop among any of the six other ideological self-identifications in the poll:

Share of adults who say Covid presents a great personal risk





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50%

Very liberal

40

30

Liberal

All adults

Moderate

Slightly liberal

20

Very conservative

Slightly conservative

Conservative

10

0

March 2022

Aug.

50%

Very liberal

40

30

Liberal

All adults

Moderate

Slightly liberal

20

Very conservative

Slightly conservative

Conservative

10

0

March 2022

Aug.


Based on surveys of 2,210 U.S. adults in March 2022 and 2,212 adults in August 2022.

Source: Morning Consult

By The New York Times

A growing number of very liberal Americans have decided that it’s time to treat Covid as an unpleasant but manageable part of life, much as many other Americans — as well as people in other countries — decided months ago.

What explains the change? In part, it’s probably a reflection of changing reality. Drugs like Paxlovid and Evusheld are now widely available, reducing the risks for vulnerable people.

But psychology seems to play a role too. After all, many aspects of the pandemic have not changed in the past six months. Both then and now, vaccines provided excellent protection against severe illness; the risks of hospitalization for children and most adults under 50 were minuscule; and the vaccines reduced the chances of long Covid.

All of which suggests that the decreasing anxiety among liberals also stems partly from the passage of time. Trump has not been president for more than 18 months. In his place is a Democrat pushing progressive policies on climate change, health care and student loans — and also encouraging Americans not to let Covid fears dominate their lives.

“Americans can remove their masks, return to work, stay in the classroom and move forward safely,” President Biden said this spring.

One example of changing liberal attitudes is related to in-person school. When asked about the best policy for K-12 education, a growing number of liberals support in-person school only, rather than hybrid or remote learning. The partisan gap on this question has narrowed since early this year:

Share of adults who favor only in-person school for K-12 students





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60%

Conservative

Moderate

Liberal

40

20

April

2021

July

Oct.

Jan.

2022

April

July

60%

Conservative

Moderate

Liberal

40

20

April

2021

July

Oct.

Jan.

2022

April

July


Data as of July 9, 2022. Chart shows four-week moving averages based on weekly surveys of around 2,200 adults.

Source: Morning Consult

By The New York Times

(The question about schools comes from the fascinating weekly polls that Morning Consult has been conducting since the start of the pandemic.)

To be sure, the partisan divides over Covid have not disappeared.

Conservatives are much less likely to be vaccinated or boosted, which means that many are voluntarily exposing themselves to Covid risk. And very liberal Americans remain more worried about the virus than almost any other demographic group, including the elderly.

That pattern does not seem consistent with scientific reality, given that the very liberal are younger than any other ideological group and that Covid’s effects are far worse for older people. But the pattern may help explain why young people in our poll reported wearing masks slightly more often than older people — and why the few schools and workplaces that still have mask mandates tend to be in liberal enclaves.

Share of adults who report always wearing a mask in public





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28%

All adults

BY AGE GROUP

29%

18 to 34

28%

35 to 44

27%

45 to 64

27%

65 and older

BY POLITICAL IDEOLOGY

44%

Very liberal

33%

Liberal

24%

Slightly liberal

30%

Moderate

19%

Slightly conservative

16%

Conservative

18%

Very conservative

All adults

28%

BY AGE GROUP

18 to 34

29%

35 to 44

28%

45 to 64

27%

65 and older

27%

BY POLITICAL IDEOLOGY

Very liberal

44%

Liberal

33%

Slightly liberal

24%

Moderate

30%

Slightly conservative

19%

Conservative

16%

Very conservative

18%


Based on surveys of 2,210 U.S. adults in March 2022 and 2,212 adults in August 2022.

Source: Morning Consult

By The New York Times

Still, here’s a prediction: Absent a major change in the virus itself (such as a dangerous new variant), the level of Covid anxiety will continue declining in coming months, across political tribes.

The federal government is likely to approve the next generation of booster shots — designed to be even more effective against the latest variants — in coming days. Within a week or two, these new shots will probably be available to Americans 12 and older.

A useful rule of thumb is that anybody who has not yet received a shot in 2022 should consider doing so in coming weeks. As Dr. Ashish Jha, the White House Covid coordinator, told me yesterday: “It’s really important, especially if you’re at elevated risk, but really for anyone. If you have not had a booster this year, it’s critical that you go and get one.”

Severe Covid illness continues to be heavily concentrated among people over 65, especially those who are unvaccinated or not current on their booster shots.

Department of Justice
  • In a filing, the Justice Department outlined how documents at Donald Trump’s residence in Florida were likely moved and hidden.

  • The search there on Aug. 8 found twice as many classified documents as Trump’s lawyers had turned over voluntarily, despite promising they had returned everything. Read the document.

  • Hard-right Trump allies have stoked outrage about the search.

  • U.N. nuclear inspectors have arrived in Kyiv. To reach the Russian-occupied Zaporizhzhia power plant, they must travel through a battlefield.

  • Vladimir Putin is using the threat of a strike on the nuclear plant to intimidate his enemies, intelligence officials say.

  • A frontline shadow economy: Ukrainian brigades are trading Russian weapons for supplies like trucks and rifles.

Doug Mills/The New York Times
  • Mikhail Gorbachev has died at 91. He presided over the dissolution of the Soviet Union, transforming Europe and helping to end the Cold War.

  • Westerners revered Gorbachev, but many Russians blamed him for losing the Soviet empire. “He is the anti-Putin,” one friend said.

  • A Times reporter reflects on Siberian memories of Gorbachev, and that Pizza Hut commercial.

  • Mississippi’s largest city, Jackson, is without clean water after severe rains overwhelmed crumbling systems.

  • Biden called conservative attacks on the F.B.I. “sickening.”

  • The average life expectancy in the U.S. has fallen to 76, from nearly 79 in 2019 — the steepest decline in almost a century.

  • NASA intends to retry its moon rocket launch on Saturday.

Yes, Anthony Fauci has been unfairly demonized. He has also been an inconsistent, flawed leader on Covid, Ari Schulman argues.

Bashar al-Assad wants to sell the world on a sanitized, post-conflict Syria. Don’t buy it, Leila Al-Shami writes.

The study of history needs to place people and events in the context of their times, Bret Stephens writes.

Gabriela Bhaskar/The New York Times

The keeper: Fati found freedom in soccer, but it also made her a Taliban target. This is the story of her escape.

Eat now, pay later: Shoppers are using small loans to help pay for everyday items — including groceries.

Mink man: Taming the “most vicious, horrible animal alive.”

Hold the pepperoni: How Totino’s survived supply chain chaos to keep the pizza rolls coming.

Ask Well: Does CBD help with insomnia?

A Times classic: She met her (literal) prince at a nightclub.

Advice from Wirecutter: Manage your mail.

Lives Lived: For nearly 25 years as the White House’s executive pastry chef, Roland Mesnier made desserts for presidents and their guests. He died at 78.

Golf wars: World No. 2 Cameron Smith headlines the latest group of PGA Tour players to join LIV Golf. But the PGA should survive this first tidal wave and retained 18 of the top 20 players.

A tale of two N.F.L. teams: The Las Vegas Raiders have now moved on from their last three years of first-round draft picks after waiving Alex Leatherwood. Yikes. Meanwhile, the San Francisco 49ers are feeling good vibes with Jimmy Garoppolo sticking around their quarterback room.

Want more sports news from The Athletic? Try The Pulse newsletter.

Though he’s no pop star, John Adams is one of few modern composers who approaches celebrity status. He is known for his operas, including “Nixon in China” and “The Death of Klinghoffer,” and won a Pulitzer for “On the Transmigration of Souls,” a reflection on the Sept. 11 attacks.

Now Adams, 75, is preparing for a new challenge: an Old Hollywood-inflected production of “Antony and Cleopatra,” which premieres at San Francisco Opera on Sept. 10 and will then move to the Metropolitan Opera. Even after so many years, as Joshua Barone writes in this profile, this veteran of classical musical is a little nervous. “When you get to be my age, you’re not compared to other composers,” Adams said. “You’re compared to your earlier works.” — Natasha Frost

Joe Lingeman for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Barrett Washburne.

This make-ahead pasta salad is fragrant with basil.

A new book collects six decades of Maurice Sendak’s art.

For Venice’s less famous neighbor, a ban on large cruise ships is an underdog’s redemption.

The pangram from yesterday’s Spelling Bee was backroom. Here is today’s puzzle.

Here’s today’s Mini Crossword, and a clue: Monastery head (five letters).

And here’s today’s Wordle. After, use our bot to get better.


Thanks for spending part of your morning with The Times. See you tomorrow. — David

P.S. “The Run-Up” podcast returns to break down this year’s midterm elections. Listen to the trailer.

Here’s today’s front page.

“The Daily” is about the Parkland school shooting.

Matthew Cullen, Natasha Frost, Lauren Hard, Ian Prasad Philbrick, Tom Wright-Piersanti and Ashley Wu contributed to The Morning. You can reach the team at themorning@nytimes.com.

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Source: Elections - nytimes.com


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