Longtime bid to curb civil lawsuits gets new focus in Senate battleground races: Poll

By Ramsey Touchberry

Full story in the Washington Examiner

Competitive Senate contests could present new political lanes for so-called tort reform advocates to limit civil lawsuits as voters look to politicians to lower inflation.

A majority of voters polled across five states with battleground Senate races — North Carolina, Georgia, Maine, Michigan, and New Hampshire — indicated that abusing the use of civil lawsuits has contributed to higher goods and services, and that their senators should address the issue.

Presented with those figures in the survey, roughly two-thirds of respondents supported tort reform, including 93% who want increased transparency for attorney fees, 83% who support capping personal injury lawyer fees at 20%, and 68% who back “loser pays” stipulations to slap the party that loses with the winning party’s legal fees.

Nearly 8-in-10, or 79%, say it’s important for senators to help prevent tort law abuse, according to the survey.

With persistent inflation and President Donald Trump’s wide-ranging tariffs that could further hike prices, pocketbook issues are likely to remain a central campaign theme for the 2026 midterm elections.

The survey found that 92% would prefer their senators take votes that would weaken so-called billboard attorneys, those often most associated with abusing the system through personal injury lawsuits.

The poll commissioned by PACT was conducted by Public Opinion Strategies from March 13-18 among 1,500 registered voters split evenly between each of the five battleground states. The margin of error is plus or minus 2.53 percentage points.

Among all respondents, 46% voted for Trump and 47% voted for former Vice President Kamala Harris. The ideological split was 31% Republican, 30% Democrat, and 38% independent.

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