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By Tara Culp-Ressler on Aug 17, 2012 at 1:36 pm
Although vice presidential candidate Paul Ryan has put Medicare back in the news by touting his drastic plan to phase out the traditional program, Americans opposition to the Republican tickets plan for Medicare is consistent across party lines. Two new polls from the Kaiser Family Foundation find that neither Democrats nor Republicans favor overhauling the government program, and a majority of Americans report they would trust Obama over Romney to make the right decisions about health care going forward.
A Kaiser poll released yesterday finds that the future of Medicare is at the forefront of voters minds. Among all the health issues that may come into play in the presidential election, voters rank Medicare as their top priority, closely followed by the high cost of health care. A full 73 percent of respondents consider the Medicare program extremely or very important:
Furthermore, respondents are uneasy about what a Romney-Ryan ticket could have in store for health care as a whole, including programs like Medicare. Seventy two percent of respondents would put their trust in President Obama when it comes to making decisions about health care reform, while just 40 percent would trust Romney on the same issue.
More: POLL: Republicans Oppose Paul Ryan's Proposed Changes To Medicare | ThinkProgress
Kaiser Poll
Kaiser/Washington Post Poll