Presidential candidates Kasich, Sanders, Trump rank highest in infrastructure concern

Sept. 16, 2015

CG/LA Infrastructure, recognizing the strategic importance of long-term infrastructure investment for the United States, has ranked both Republican and Democratic Presidential candidates in terms of their ability and likelihood to catalyze new infrastructure investment in the US marketplace. In this ranking, completed prior to the upcoming second Republican presidential debate, Democratic candidate Bernie Sanders and Republican candidate John Kasich tied for the top position.

These monthly rankings are a part of CG/LA’s Blueprint 2025 initiative, an 18-month, 100-nameplate campaign by US chief executive officers to craft an infrastructure plan for the next presidential administration. Blueprint 2025 aims to raise infrastructure to a priority level on par with national security while generating long-term bipartisan support through at least the next three election cycles.

“This is not a narrow issue,” says Norman F Anderson, president and chief executive officer of CG/LA Infrastructure. “Infrastructure, like education, is a foundational issue, underlying our ability to be productive, to be prosperous, and to creatively imagine--and create--our country’s future.”

For each candidate, key issues measured include:

• Legacy Performance--have they successfully built infrastructure in the past?;

• Plan of Action--do they have an achievable infrastructure plan?;

• Team Performance--can they catalyze great performance across a disparate executive team that would have to manage a successful infrastructure build?

“Every successful presidential candidate for the last two generations has promised to build our infrastructure, helping us to regain our global competitiveness--none has been able to do it,” says Anderson. “Our monthly rating system provides a structure for the evaluation of candidates, Republicans and Democrats, rating their ability to get this done.”

US Senator Bernie Sanders and Ohio Governor John Kasich tied for the top position scoring 18 points, with Donald Trump following closely behind with 17 points. The next closest candidate was Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, receiving 11 points.

 Sanders earned high marks for being the most vocal candidate on the issue, having proposed a major infrastructure investment initiative in the Senate and emphasizing the importance of infrastructure on the campaign trail. Kasich led in legacy performance, having applied his public and private sector experience to pass a strong transportation budget in Ohio. Trump received recognition for his past experience as a builder and focus on infrastructure on the campaign trail.

The candidates are invited to attend CG/LA’s upcoming 7th North American Infrastructure Leadership Forum, a selective gathering of more than 500 C-level executives representing technology firms, engineers, construction principals and investors who represent the private and public sectors, and project sponsors from throughout North America. Please visit http://www.cg-la.com/forums/nalf7 or email [email protected] for more information.