Poll: Utahns Support Privacy Protection Measures

Libertas Institute just released our first Libertas Insights/Overton Insights poll, gauging how Utahns feel about their state and various policy issues. You can explore the full results here.

Public Hearings for Surveillance Technology

The Libertas Institute/Overton Insights poll also found that Utahns are united in support of policies that would limit government surveillance. Utah voters strongly agree that government agencies should not deploy new surveillance tools without first hearing from the public, with 84% supporting required public hearings and only 12% opposing them. 

A Truth in Surveillance law where public hearings are required before new tech is deployed, similar to existing Truth in Taxation Law for tax increases, is welcomed by voters across the political aisle, with Republicans (+72%), Democrats (78%), and Independents (67%) alike showing this is not a partisan issue but a basic good-government expectation. People want transparency and a voice before technologies such as facial recognition cameras or license plate readers are implemented.

Legislative Approval for Surveillance Technology

This poll also found that voters favor requiring the Legislature to review and approve new types of surveillance technology before agencies can use them, with 80% support statewide. Only 12% of voters oppose this idea. Again, backing is strong across all political affiliations, reinforcing that checks and balances on government surveillance are common sense, not controversial. 

Utahns clearly want elected representatives, not unelected agencies, making the final call on powerful new monitoring tools. That level of consensus gives lawmakers a clear mandate to put guardrails in place, such as SB 19, to prioritize Utahns’ privacy in an increasingly-digital age.

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About the author

Jason Chipman

Jason directs Libertas’ public policy efforts with state government. Before joining Libertas, Jason spent 8 years as a member of the Missouri House of Representatives. He received bachelor’s degrees in Organizational Leadership from Drury University and Accounting from Central Methodist University. Jason worked for a semiconductor supply company for 14 years before getting elected, wearing many different hats in that time. He also spent 5 years in the US Navy, completing two deployments to the Persian Gulf aboard the USS John F. Kennedy CV-67. Jason and his wife Elane home school their five children and enjoy traveling and hiking.

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