05/06/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 05/06/2026 08:23
WASHINGTON, May 6-Associated Builders and Contractors today released the results of a new survey conducted by The Harris Poll in six battleground states-Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin-which found that nonunion skilled trades workers-who make up the nearly 90% of the construction workforce-are an influential voting bloc in elections and were the driving force behind Republicans' success in 2024, including the election of President Donald Trump.
"While the working-class identity has too often been conflated with union affiliation, the data shows that nonunion construction workers voted for President Trump at a significantly higher rate in 2024," said Michael Bellaman, ABC president and CEO. "In fact, through measures of party alignment, candidate support and policy preferences, nonunion workers in the trades consistently align more closely with the GOP than their union counterparts.
"The survey also makes it clear that working-class support should not be confused with union leadership support," said Bellaman. "Nonunion construction workers not only supported President Trump at a significantly higher rate than union workers in 2024, but they also vastly outnumber union workers in the battleground states that will determine control of Congress next year.
"Despite this political reality, the Trump administration continues to support the controversial project labor agreement mandate that President Joe Biden established via executive order," said Bellaman. "The PLA mandate tells nonunion construction workers they are unworthy of participating in federally funded projects, which risks alienating a workforce that forms a critical part of the GOP's electoral base, particularly in swing states where nonunion workers play an outsized role.
"Ahead of the midterms, President Trump and his administration have a choice," said Bellaman. "They can reverse course and allow all workers, including the nonunion workers who powered their 2024 victory, to participate on federal projects or they can continue appeasing union leadership through policies that restrict competition, raise costs and alienate the overwhelming majority of the construction workforce.
"In the 2026 midterms and beyond, Republicans who embrace fair and open competition will see continued support from the majority of skilled trades workers in their states and districts. Those who support government-mandated project labor agreements in the hope that appeasing union bosses will win over rank-and-file workers are chasing a bargain the data shows does not exist."
Highlights from the study include: