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Half of Americans Believe Trump Verdict Correct, Call for End to Campaign: Poll


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In the wake of former President Donald Trump's conviction on 34 felony counts of falsifying business documents, a recent ABC News/Ipsos poll reveals that about half of Americans believe the verdict was correct and that Trump should end his campaign. This conviction marks the first time a former U.S. president has been convicted of a crime, and Trump has since appealed the ruling.

 

According to the poll, 50 percent of respondents agreed with the New York jury's decision, while 49 percent said Trump should immediately withdraw from the presidential race. Despite the conviction, Trump's favorability rating remained unchanged at 31 percent, consistent with previous polls.

 

The charges against Trump stem from hush money payments made in the weeks leading up to the 2016 election, intended to silence allegations of past affairs with an adult film star. The trial has polarized public opinion, with 47 percent of respondents agreeing with Trump's claim that the charges are politically motivated.

 

A majority of those surveyed, 51 percent, believe Trump intentionally committed wrongdoing, while 12 percent think he acted wrongly but unintentionally. The poll also highlighted significant partisan divides: only 18 percent of Republicans supported the guilty verdict, compared to 83 percent of Democrats. Among independents, a key voting bloc, 52 percent agreed with the verdict.

 

The poll also addressed President Joe Biden's approval rating, which stands at 32 percent, nearly identical to Trump's. Despite Trump's conviction, he still leads Biden by about 1 percentage point in The Hill/Decision Desk HQ average of polls, though Biden has gained ground since the verdict, leading in most polls conducted after Thursday.

 

A separate CBS News/YouGov poll provides further insight into public perception of Trump's trial. It found that most independents believe Trump received a fair trial, with 54 percent agreeing and 46 percent disagreeing. Overall, 56 percent of U.S. adults considered the trial fair, while 44 percent did not.

 

When asked if the jury reached the right or wrong verdict, 57 percent of U.S. adults said the jury was correct, while 43 percent disagreed. Among independents, 56 percent supported the verdict, and 44 percent opposed it. The partisan split was stark, with almost all Democrats (96 percent) affirming the fairness of the trial and the correctness of the verdict, while a large majority of Republicans (86 percent) considered the trial unfair and 82 percent thought the verdict was wrong.

 

The Republican establishment has echoed Trump's condemnation of the trial, labeling it as unfair and politically motivated. Following the verdict, Trump criticized Judge Juan Merchan, calling him "the devil" and denouncing the trial as "rigged" and "a scam." These comments followed a fundraising appeal in which Trump referred to himself as "a political prisoner."

 

The CBS News/YouGov poll, conducted from May 30 to June 1, included 989 U.S. adults and has a margin of error of plus or minus 5.2 percentage points. This poll underscores the deep divisions within American society regarding Trump's legal battles and their implications for his political future.

 

Credit: The Hill 2024-06-04

 

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Posted
7 minutes ago, doctormann said:

 

Yes, sad isn't it!  A nation of 350+ million people and the best that they can do is a choice between a convicted felon and a geriatric.  No  hope for America I'm afraid!

 

Yeah two grandpa’s are going to destroy us and what hid forsaken craphole are you from 

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Posted
25 minutes ago, TigerandDog said:

This is just another example of the ludicrous electoral system in the USA. Convicted felons cannot vote yet they can run for president. How f'ing dumb is the American electoral system.

Actually, that is not true. Depends on the state.  

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Posted

Yeah, so those GOP zealots lining up at trial weren't just competing to be VP, they were getting face time in the possibility that the candidate-apparent exits the running, for whatever reason.

 

Anticipating same-party fireworks at the GOP convention next month, will be wild.

 

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Posted
15 minutes ago, Irish star said:

Yeah two grandpa’s are going to destroy us and what hid forsaken craphole are you from 

I'm not defending the situation in my particular cr*phole, as you put it.  Things are just as bad there.

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Posted
9 minutes ago, QuantumQuandry said:

so many have lost their ability to reason, impartially

 

You can't lose what you never had.

 

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Posted

50% would vote for a convicted felon. (That likes the ladies)

50% would vote for an (as yet) unconvicted felon. (that likes little girls).

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Posted
21 minutes ago, wombat said:

 I thought there was reasonable doubt, historically speaking🥷i

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Nope.

 

There was a legal settlement, in public view.

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Posted
5 minutes ago, cooked said:

50% would vote for a convicted felon. (That likes the ladies)

50% would vote for an (as yet) unconvicted felon. (that likes little girls).

Put them together and you get 150 million combined more or less. There is not any political candidate that gets anything near a clear majority. America has more than 400 million people and more we don't know about.. 

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