While many of Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s aggressive plans have come under fire from prominent billionaires, Republicans and fellow Democrats vying for the presidential nomination, her proposal to tax the ultra-rich resonates with most Americans regardless of age, gender or party.

A New York Times/Survey Monkey poll shows six in 10 Americans back Warren’s plan, which would require households to pay a 2% tax on every dollar of net worth over $50 million. The progressive senator, who if elected plans to use the wealth tax to help pay for universal health care and major investments in education and criminal justice, also calls for a new tax on billionaires: 6% on every dollar of net worth exceeding $1 billion.

Just as Warren’s surge in national polling against former Vice President Joe Biden and Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders dipped in the last month, support for her wealth tax has lost a few points — 66% to 63% — since The New York Times last asked voters about it in July.

But the plan still receives broad support from almost every demographic. Three-quarters of Democrats and more than half of Republicans approve of the tax hike. The plan also finds backing from more than 60 percent of Republican women; more than half of all independents and 65% of independent men with a college degree; and more than 80% of Democratic men and women with degrees, the poll found.

Only college-educated Republican men strongly disapprove; the poll shows they are the only group in which fewer than half, 41.5%, support the wealth tax.

While the wealth tax garners majority support from every major racial, educational and income group, the Times notes that Warren and other candidates still have an uphill battle against Biden to gain trust from African American and Latino voters.

A recent Quinnipiac University poll showed Biden with 44% of support from black voters in South Carolina, compared to just 10% for Sanders, who’s also proposed a wealth tax, and only 8% for Warren.

The Times poll also showed the Warren’s plan for Medicare for all remains sharply divided along party lines, with just 28% of Republicans approving the idea, the same amount since July. More than 80% of Democrats support Warren’s health care plan, which would cover all Americans and essentially eliminate private insurance over a number of years. Overall support for the plan dropped four points from 59% in July to 55% in November.