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By a 73% - 24% margin, New Hampshire residents favor some tax increases to help address New Hampshire’s budget shortfall. As the severity of the proposed spending cuts in the GOP House budget has become known, those who favor balancing the budget with spending cuts alone has decreased from 29% to 24%.
A new WMUR Granite State Poll asked respondents to select the approach they would choose to deal with the budget shortfall. 24% responded entirely with spending cuts, 21% said mainly spending cuts with some tax increases, 36% chose an even balance, 11% said mainly tax increases and some spending cuts, and 5% chose to address the budget shortfall entirely with tax increases.
When asked about spending cuts for specific programs, solid majorities said there should be no spending cuts in healthcare services for lower income residents (60% - 39%) or mental health services (59% - 39%). The respondents expressed support for at least "some spending cuts" in funding for hospitals (56% - 39%), infrastructure projects (54% - 43%), and state university and community colleges budgets (52% - 46%). Less than 10% support "significant cuts" for any program.
The comprehensive survey also indicated there is little support for GOP-backed proposals limiting workers' collective bargaining rights.
Several states, from Wisconsin to Massachusetts, have sought to curb state spending by limiting the ability of public employees to collectively bargain for benefits. There is little support for this proposal in New Hampshire. Most state residents (66%) think that private sector workers should have the right to form unions and collectively bargain and 62% think that public employees, should have that right.
The Granite State Poll — sponsored by WMUR-TV, and conducted by the University of New Hampshire Survey Center — interviewed 504 New Hampshire adults between April 15 and April 26, 2011. The margin of error is +/- 4.4 percent.