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Many of us in a survey say trucks, SUVs are too big; many more of us buy them

Many of us in a survey say trucks, SUVs are too big; many more of us buy them


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The sales charts prove Americans' wide and enduring love for pickups and SUVs. Last year's top 10 sellers were three pickups, three compact SUVs, another pickup, the lone sedan, a compact SUV, and a midsize SUV. Surveys and studies, however, prove Americans' wide and enduring ambivalence for pickups and SUVs, specifically the large ones that get accused of more antisocial behaviors every year, from outsized rates of killing children and pedestrians to their outsized effects on the Earth. A YouGov release on a new survey about American feelings on these two body styles comes with the provocative title, "Many Americans think SUVs and trucks have become too large and should be regulated." The short of it is that out of 1,116 survey respondents, 27% "believe that carmakers should voluntarily regulate the size and design of vehicles with the safety of pedestrians in mind," and a quarter of those classify themselves as truck drivers.

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An even greater number, 32%, "believe that the government should step in and impose regulations," and a quarter of that portion also classifying themselves as truck drivers.

We need a little clarification about the word "truck" here. The data research group YouGov says it's referring to all pickups and SUVs as trucks, the combined segments forming 78% of light-vehicle sales in the U.S. last year. Based on what we've covered in the past few years, Americans generally don't include compact SUVs like the Toyota RAV4 or Honda CR-V, or even compact pickups like the Ford Maverick and Hyundai Santa Cruz, as among the problematic behemoths tabbed as the biggest threats to everything that isn't a behemoth. As far as we can tell, YouGov includes these compact offerings in the "truck" classification. So when the results show that 47% of survey respondents own or drive a truck, they could be referring to a Ford F-Series or a Tesla Model Y.

The data showed 41% of respondents saying trucks have "become too large in recent years," with 39% of the truck drivers in agreement. We've love to see a finer breakdown of vehicle sizes; it's easy to imagine a Nissan Rogue driver pointing the finger at a Silverado 2500, a little harder to imagine a Ram 2500 driver doing the same.