A new study from the Center for Working‑Class Politics and Jacobin reveals where working-class voters stand on key issues and how they differ from wealthier Americans. The message is clear: economic populism must be the core of progressive appeals to workers.
Jul 21, 2025
Yet others counter that while the working class may hold more conservative views on a variety of sociocultural issues, they do not hold more conservative economic views. These advocates argue that economic populism is key to winning back working-class support.
To adjudicate these claims, a clear accounting of working-class attitudes is needed — not only for the present but over time. How have working-class attitudes changed? And critically, how do they compare to the attitudes of wealthier Americans?
What We Did
Top Takeaways
- Working‑class voters overwhelmingly support a range of bold progressive economic policies.
From raising the minimum wage to protecting Social Security, working‑class Americans showed broad approval of a wide range of progressive economic policies. - Working-class voters hold more progressive views than middle- and upper-class voters on a host of economic issues.
Working-class Americans showed stronger support than wealthier Americans for many predistributive measures like minimum wage hikes and job protections, and were also more favorable toward redistributive policies such as expanding Social Security and Medicare spending — though they express greater skepticism when those policies were explicitly tied to increased taxation.- Cultural conservatism isn’t a brick wall.
While less progressive than middle- and upper-class Americans, working‑class views on civil rights, LGBTQ rights, and immigration have shifted to the left over the past two decades.
- The real gap? Middle- and upper-class voters have moved left more quickly than working-class voters.
Other voters have rapidly gone progressive on social issues — creating the impression that working-class voters are more conservative than they are.
- There’s an opening with some Trump voters.
Over 10 percent of 2020 Trump voters are working‑class, economically progressive, and cultural moderates. With the right messaging and messengers, they are persuadable.
You can read the full report here.
- Cultural conservatism isn’t a brick wall.
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