The “year of the outsider” in this presidential election has also been the year of free trade skeptics. But according to a new poll, the biggest group of them aren’t gathered in a hip cafe serving $4 fair-trade dark roasts. That is, unless demographers have missed a mass migration of Republicans to Brooklyn.
35 percent of self-identified Republicans say free trade agreements are bad for the American economy, a new Associated Press survey reports, compared to just 22 percent of Democrats. Overall, more respondents view free trade deals favorably than unfavorably, at 33 to 27 percent — but a plurality, 37 percent, say they make little difference.
The findings are part of a larger survey the AP conducted about the public’s sentiments on trade issues, which found that Americans value inexpensive goods more than made-in-the-U.S.A. branding.
Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders have tapped into an anti-free trade strain among their respective supporters, but the other major contenders in each party, Ted Cruz and Hillary Clinton, have also expressed their own free-trade skepticism. All four candidates have expressed their opposition to the Trans Pacific Partnership, for example, the major free trade agreement pushed by the Obama administration.
Read more about the AP’s findings here.

