In July 2023, Count on Mothers examined mothers' views on the Parents Bill of Rights (H.R.5), a federal bill addressing parental rights in K–12 education. Drawing on mothers across regions and the political spectrum, the survey captured firsthand experience with public education and family decision-making. Mothers showed strong cross-partisan agreement on many core provisions of the bill — including the right to attend School Board meetings and parental consent for medical examinations — while expressing more varied views on specific implementation measures. The aggregated findings were shared with Congressional legislators to inform deliberations on policies affecting children and families.
Related themes:
Shared Priorities and Cross-Partisan Alignment Among Mothers
Broad cross-partisan participation: The survey included mothers from 44 states and across the political spectrum, providing a geographically and ideologically diverse perspective on the Parents Bill of Rights.
Strong alignment on parental participation: Mothers across political ideologies overwhelmingly agreed that parents should have the right to participate in School Board meetings.
Consensus on parental consent for medical care: Mothers strongly agreed that parental consent should be required before school employees conduct medical examinations or screenings of children, with timely notification in emergency situations.
Variation on implementation details: Mothers’ views diverged on four provisions of the bill, including the requirement for a curriculum and book review comment period every three weeks, indicating less consensus on certain operational aspects.
Value of lived experience: Mothers’ responses reflect their first-hand experiences navigating schools and highlight areas of agreement as well as complexity in how parental rights policies are implemented.
Source: Count on Mothers, Parents Bill of Rights, July 2023. Community panel survey of U.S. mothers, n=277. Research led by a PhD-credentialed researcher.
Explore Count on Mothers reports — rapid polls and in-depth national studies.
Methodology Count on Mothers conducts nationally representative research with U.S. mothers, weighted to reflect the population and reported in aggregate. Research is led by a PhD + MPH team. Findings have informed policy, industry, and media, and entered the Congressional Record on childcare, paid leave, and technology policy.
From January through July 2024, Count on Mothers identified the issues mothers most want federal policymakers to address related to their children's health and safety. The two-stage study began with an open-ended question to mothers over six months, then tested the emerging themes through a structured follow-up survey of mothers across regions and the political spectrum. Five issues consistently rose to the top — substance use, abortion and reproductive health, healthcare access and cost, food access and nutrition, and childcare affordability — with striking consistency across geography, education, and ideology in both what mothers prioritize and the underlying stresses shaping family life.
In June 2024, Count on Mothers examined mothers' views on major industries and corporate accountability — identifying which sectors mothers find most concerning for families and capturing open-ended feedback directed at corporate leaders. Drawing on a nationally representative sample of mothers across regions and the political spectrum, the survey measured industry-level concern, sentiment toward business leadership, and the institutional pressure points families navigate daily. Mothers showed strong cross-partisan alignment on deep mistrust of corporate decision-making, with consistent concern that profit is prioritized over children's safety and family well-being.
The Impact of Childcare Costs on Families' Financial Security
In May 2024, Count on Mothers examined how childcare costs and access shape U.S. families' financial security — including effects on savings, work hours, net income, career advancement, and long-term earning potential. Drawing on a national sample of mothers across regions and the political spectrum, the survey combined eight quantitative measures with an open-ended question inviting mothers to propose solutions. Findings show that childcare costs exert significant pressure on family finances, employment decisions, and long-term economic security — with patterns largely consistent across the political spectrum.
Mothers' Views on the PROTECT Act and Youth Vaping Recommendations
In April 2024, Count on Mothers examined mothers' views on federal recommendations for regulating e-cigarettes — including provisions from the PROTECT Act and the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations' Youth Vaping Epidemic Report — a study requested by the Subcommittee, led by Senator Richard Blumenthal. Drawing on a nationally representative sample of mothers across regions and the political spectrum, the survey captured firsthand experience with youth vaping and access to e-cigarette products. Mothers showed strong cross-partisan support for strengthened federal research, regulation, and enforcement to reduce youth e-cigarette use.