ELECTIONS
The numbers behind Trump’s confidence the Jan. 6
indictment won’t matter
The GOP consensus: Let’s move on already.
Seventy-three percent of Republicans agreed in a
December poll that there has been too much focus on Jan. 6. |
By STEVEN
SHEPARD
07/22/2023
07:00 AM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/2023/07/22/gop-jan-6-polling-00107652
The most
common sentiment from Republican voters about Jan. 6, 2021, isn’t that it was
an assault on democracy or that Donald Trump is the true winner of the 2020
election.
It’s that
they are over it.
The polling
industry, like the Republican electorate, has largely moved on from it too. The
most recent numbers come from surveys conducted last December or in early
January, timed to the second anniversary of the riot earlier this year. And
they tell, largely, the same story.
As a POLITICO/Morning Consult poll from late December
showed: 73 percent of Republicans agreed that there has been too much focus on
Jan. 6.
While the
GOP electorate may be eager to move on from that moment, it doesn’t mean that
it won’t matter in the primary. Indeed, as additional federal criminal charges
loom over Donald Trump for his alleged efforts to steal the 2020 presidential
election from Joe Biden, there is still an opportunity for Trump’s rivals to
contrast themselves with the former president.
That’s
because, despite that too-much-focus number, public opinion among Republicans
around the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the Capitol is complicated.
In the days
and weeks immediately following Jan. 6, Republicans, like all Americans,
overwhelmingly disapproved of the rioters’ actions.
That’s not
the case anymore: More Republicans still say they disapprove of the Capitol
attack, but there’s a growing bloc in the GOP that sympathizes both with the
rioters’ demands and actions.
That’s part
of the reason why Trump’s opponents have tiptoed around the issue since the
former president decried receiving a “target letter” from the Justice
Department last weekend. The number of Republicans who agree with what Trump’s
supporters did on Jan. 6 is still a distinct minority — but that doesn’t mean
the majority cares much about it or thinks it disqualifies Trump from running
again.
So what do
Republicans actually think about what happened on Jan. 6? Here are five
takeaways from the polling data:
Few
Republicans support the Jan. 6 rioters — but that share is growing
For all of
Trump’s embrace of the Jan. 6 attack — whether suggesting he will pardon those
convicted of federal crimes or being serenaded at a political event by rioters
in a song recorded over a jailhouse phone line — it’s not popular, even among
Republican voters.
But
opinions are softening. An Economist/YouGov poll conducted around the first of
the year — timed to the second anniversary of the attack — found that 49
percent of Republicans disapproved of the events at the Capitol that day. That
was down a whopping 25 points from a poll conducted the week after Jan. 6.
But the
roughly half of Republicans who disapproved of the Jan. 6 attack is still
significantly more than the 32 percent who said they approved of it in the most
recent Economist/YouGov poll — an increase from 16 percent immediately after
the riot.
Republicans
are less likely to blame Trump for the attack
It may have
been Trump’s refusal to concede the 2020 election that brought his supporters
to Washington, but most Republicans give the former president a pass when it
comes to the Capitol breach.
In the Dec.
2022 POLITICO/Morning Consult poll, 40 percent of Republican voters said Trump
had “no responsibility at all” for “the events that led to a group of people
attacking police and breaking into” the Capitol, while another 16 percent said
he wasn’t too responsible.
DeSantis
says Trump 'didn't do anything' to stop Jan. 6
Republicans
have Jan. 6 fatigue
Last
December, Quinnipiac University asked voters to choose between two sentences
with which they agreed more: The “storming” of the Capitol “was an attack on
democracy that should never be forgotten,” or “too much is being made of the
storming” of the Capitol, “and it is time to move on.”
The results
among Republican voters were lopsided: 79 percent said it’s time to move on.
Only 16 percent said Jan. 6 shouldn’t be forgotten.
But that
puts Republicans crosswise with the broader electorate. A majority of voters,
56 percent, think the events of Jan. 6 should never be forgotten. Roughly four
in 10, 39 percent, think it’s time to move on. The numbers among crucial
independent voters are nearly identical: 56 percent say Jan. 6 shouldn’t be
forgotten; 38 percent say it’s time to move on.
GOP voters
don’t see Trump’s conduct as criminal
Quinnipiac
also asked voters whether Trump’s “efforts to change the results” of the 2020
presidential election were criminal or not. Overall, half of voters, 50
percent, say they were, compared to 42 percent who said Trump didn’t commit a
crime.
But only 9
percent of Republicans thought Trump’s maneuvering to remain in power, despite
losing the election, constituted a crime. Roughly eight in 10, 81 percent, said
Trump’s actions weren’t criminal.
McCarthy:
Trump not 'criminally responsible' for Jan. 6
In the Dec.
2022 POLITICO/Morning Consult poll, only 16 percent of GOP voters said the
events of Jan. 6 would have “a major impact” on their vote in the 2024
presidential election. That could, however, include the small-but-real cadre of
Republicans who approve of the attack on the Capitol and supported Trump’s
efforts to remain president despite losing the election.
(Trump, who
announced in Nov. 2022 that he was running again, was already a declared
candidate when the poll was conducted.)
Another 19
percent of Republicans said it will have “a minor impact,” while nearly
two-in-three, 65 percent said it won’t have any impact at all.
Overall,
about a third of voters, 34 percent, said Jan. 6 would have a major impact. But
many of those are Democrats disinclined to cross over and vote for Trump
anyway. A narrow majority of Democrats, 53 percent, said it would have a major
impact.


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