Whether states should have – or continue to – put strict coronavirus health-safety restrictions on restaurants, shopping, sporting events and other parts of their state economies has been among the most hotly debated topics in the U.S. political over the past year.
Though many pundits and policy analysts have been arguing for roughly the past 12 months that the U.S. economy should be fully reopen, others have claimed that fear of COVID-19 means consumers and businesses are less likely to participate in a fully open economy even if all restrictions are lifted.
On the other hand, federal data indicate that at the end of last year states with fewer restrictions, such as Florida and North Dakota, were doing far better than states that had pursued aggressive shutdown policies for most of the year, such as California and New York.
The survey of 1,200 registered voters was conducted by Scott Rasmussen using a mixed mode approach from March 4-6, 2021.
Click here to see this poll’s cross-demographic tabulations.
Click here to see the poll’s methodology and sample demographics.
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