Democratic primary voters in the four crucial early states of Iowa, New Hampshire, Nevada, and South Carolina overwhelmingly want the federal government to be tougher on Wall Street, according to a new poll.

They aren’t alone. A strong majority of Republicans and independents — 65 and 72 percent, respectively — also think Wall Street needs more government regulation beyond the steps taken after the 2008 financial crisis, according to a poll conducted by Lake Research Partners and Chesapeake Beach Consulting and commissioned by nonpartisan groups Americans for Financial Reform and Center for Responsible Lending. The poll was shown exclusively to Vox.

This poll isn’t a one-off. The pollsters ask a variety of questions about the government’s role in financial regulation, and they have been asking them for the last seven years, with largely consistent results. This body of data suggests the aftershocks of the financial crisis in 2008 are still present in many Americans’ minds, and there is an appetite for bold ideas to tackle it.

“I think really the most striking thing about this polling has been its consistency,” Lisa Donner, executive director of Americans for Financial Reform, told Vox. “The experience of the crisis was a really deep and serious one for people. It may have faded into memory of some policy makers and some regulators, unfortunately, but it has not faded in people’s memory because the experience was long-lasting for people.”

Politicians being tougher on big banks and financial companies was a big issue in the 2016 presidential election. It’s coming back into prominence in 2020 with the candidacies of Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders. Going into a busy election cycle, this poll shows there are years of strong bipartisan appetite for big ideas to push back on Wall Street.

“It’s getting resurrected by Warren and Sanders,” said Democratic pollster Celinda Lake, one of the pollsters who conducted the survey. “People are just adamant, we want this kind of regulation, we want these rules changed.”

Of course, it’s worth remembering President Donald Trump also capitalized on this populist sentiment in the 2016 campaign — promising to “drain the swamp” and deliver economic relief to Americans. While Trump has done everything he can to roll back regulations and is mired in scandals, he is also presiding during a robust economy. There’s no guarantee this sentiment will boost a Democratic candidate to victory.

Whether it’s Trump, Warren, Sanders or another candidate, presidential hopefuls in either party will have to find a way to address this lingering resentment in 2020. Lake and Republican pollster Bob Carpenter stressed this is a bipartisan issue.

“Anytime you see numbers this strong across partisanship, ignoring them is at your own electoral peril,” Carpenter said.

What the poll shows

The poll surveyed 1,000 likely Democrat, Republican, and independent voters across the nation in mid-July. But pollsters did an additional oversample of 400 Democratic primary voters in the first four early states, to get a sense of what early primary voters are thinking.

For the most part, early-state Democrats mirrored their party nationally — when asked if they supported increased financial regulation, for example, 79 percent of early state Democratic primary voters said they did, compared to 81 percent of Democrats nationally. Like many of the ideas pollsters tested, increased regulation was slightly less popular with Republicans and independents but still supported by strong majorities in both groups: 69 percent of all voters polled said they supported it, including 58 percent of independents, and 60 percent of Republicans.

There was even more widespread support of the general principle of regulating financial services and their products, with 89 percent of all voters polled saying it is important to regulate them.

Here’s what else pollsters found:

73 percent of all voters polled said Wall Street practices deserve additional government regulation beyond the measures taken after the 2008 financial crisis, including 80 percent of Democrats, 72 percent of independents, and 65 percent of Republicans. 81 percent of early Democratic primary voters said further accountability is needed.

81 percent of all voters polled said they support the 2010 Wall Street reform law known as Dodd-Frank, including 85 percent of Democrats, 77 percent of independents, and 78 percent of Republicans. 81 percent of early state Democratic primary voters supported the law.

The pollsters also presented voters with two arguments; one saying Wall Street and the financial industry are too powerful and pose a continued threat, and another saying the government has intervened too much changing the financial system. They found:

49 percent of all voters polled said they believed Wall Street was a continued threat, compared to 20 percent of voters who believed the government has intervened too much.

Republicans were the most split on this issue, but 35 percent of Republicans said they believe Wall Street was still a threat, compared to 30 percent who were concerned about government intervention.

47 percent of independents said Wall Street was a continued threat, compared to just 13 percent who said the government had intervened too much.

And 64 percent of Democrats were worried about Wall Street compared to 14 percent concerned about the government.

Finally, the pollsters took a look at voter attitudes toward the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and the Trump administration’s effort to roll back rules protecting people from predatory lending. They found a large majority of all voters concerned, including:

70 percent of voters were concerned about ending enforcement of rules protecting military members from abuse by payday lenders.

69 percent were concerned about the CFPB reducing efforts to protect students from abusive student loans and servicers.

Another 69 percent were concerned about the agency ending public access to a database of complaints filed against banks and financial firms.

“The public’s not having it,” Lake said. “They want accountability, and accountability means enforcement.”

What this means for 2020

While this poll and the six others that came before it show that regulating Wall Street is a bipartisan issue on voters’ minds, it’s too early to say whether it could really make a dent in the 2020 election.

There has been some chatter about the possibility of another recession; if that happened closer to the election, it could certainly have an impact. But the news is far more focused on impeachment as well as a plethora of other issues.

“What we’re seeing is there are so many issues out there that people are talking about with 20 Democratic presidential candidates,” said Carpenter, the Republican pollster. “These are important issues and if they rise to the top they could be a problem for Republican policy makers.”

It’s rare there is such bipartisan support on an issue in a politically polarized time. But the public’s views on Wall Street go to the heart of a belief that the system is primed to benefit banks and CEOS over working people.

“They see the connection with money and lobbying and rigging the system,” Lake said. “Even though we have a time of incredible cynicism about government and deep distrust, when you come to this area, people are like no, we need tough enforcement but not weak enforcement.”

Rooting out corruption is a bipartisan issue; as a presidential candidate, Trump borrowed an old slogan of House Democrats, promising to “drain the swamp.” But Trump’s administration has proved time and time again it is very much of the swamp; it has been embroiled in numerous corruption scandals and rolled back consumer protection regulations at every turn.

Of course, this is an issue that uniquely benefits Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren. Warren, in particular, helped create the CFPB and is an expert in Wall Street regulation and predatory lending reform.

“You have two people who have made this the centerpiece of their campaign, but if you step back, you have every candidate talking about this more than candidates in 2012 and 2016,” Lake said. “It is powerfully few issues anymore that have as much bipartisan consensus as this one does.”