The pandemic fades as American support turns towards unvaccinated workers. 

By a two-to-one margin, more American voters believe that employees who were fired for not getting vaccinated during the Covid pandemic should be rehired.  

WHY IT MATTERS—The results are another indication of how the pandemic is no longer top of mind for Americans.  

THE NUMBERS—A new survey from the Republican polling firm WPA Intelligence discovered the following:  

  • 57 percent agreed “that people who were fired for not getting a vaccination should be rehire.” 28 percent disagreed.  
  • 79 percent of Republican respondents agreed, whereas only 16 percent disagreed.  
  • 58 percent of independents agreed, and 26 percent disagreed.  
  • It was only among Democratic respondents that more believed workers fired for being unvaccinated should not be rehired, with 35 percent supporting rehiring and 43 percent opposing the idea.   

SHIFTING OPINION—While during most of the pandemic polls demonstrated overarching support for government vaccine mandates, even in predominately red states such as Texas, American opinion has drastically shifted as the pandemic hysteria fades. 

GO DEEPER—Click here to read more.  


Read Next:

  • Newt Gingrich: The Voter Tsunami Begins to Drown Democrats

    Biden’s Big Government Socialist agenda will only further push voters to reject the Democrat party and the first signs are already in.

  • Losing Our “Government of the People…”

    A new poll shows Americans think our government fails to achieve the ideal set forth by Abraham Lincoln in the Gettysburg Address.

  • Most Think Social Media Companies Are Biased

    Americans don’t believe social media company claims that they are neutral platforms.  

  • Invasion at the Border? Americans Weigh In 

    A new survey shows most Americans consider the crisis at the border to be an invasion of the United States and want military action to stop it.  

  • Workers Feeling the Pinch

    71 percent of American workers say inflation is outpacing their salary.  

  • Why The Hispanic Vote is Difficult to Poll 

    According to an article in the National Journal by Natalie Jackson, Hispanic voters could be the determining factor for who controls Congress next year.