Washington – A new survey conducted by Morning Consult and commissioned by CCIA finds that U.S. voters overwhelmingly agree that the leading American technology companies have a positive impact on their communities and the economy. The poll, conducted in September 2024, interviewed 2,500 U.S. voters and was weighted to approximate a target sample of registered voters based on age, gender, race, educational attainment, 2020 presidential vote, and region.
Major takeaways from the poll:
“As Americans head to the polls this November, politicians should note that only 19% of voters say they trust the federal government to ensure the appropriate level of competition in digital markets, and by a more than 5 to 1 ratio, swing voters are less inclined to vote for a member of Congress who supports government action that threatens valued digital services.”
CCIA is an international, not-for-profit trade association representing a broad cross section of communications and technology firms. For more than 50 years, CCIA has promoted open markets, open systems, and open networks. CCIA members employ more than 1.6 million workers, invest more than $100 billion in research and development, and contribute trillions of dollars in productivity to the global economy.
When the US election result pushed shares in the artificial intelligence chip giant Nvidia to a record high and did the same to the price of bitcoin cryptocurre
Google, Microsoft, Amazon, Apple and Meta are among US technology giants hiring more H-1B visa holding employees in the last eight years even as Indian IT servi
Big Tech leaders came out on social media to congratulate or to accept president-elect Donald Trump’s election win. ADVERTISEMENTBig Tech bosses
What does a Trump win mean for American AI Policy? This is a question that I have been asked by policymakers time and time again over the past months. With