© Provided by The HillMore than half of voters think Trump should face indictment over Jan. 6: poll
Just a couple weeks after the last public hearing of the summer from the House select committee
probing the Jan. 6 attack, voters are split on how the country should move on from the attempted
insurrection and how much Trump should be held responsible.
The Harvard CAPS-Harris poll showed that 53 percent of voters agreed Trump should face
a criminal indictment for Jan. 6, but 54 percent of voters also said he should be allowed
to run for president again.
Mark Penn, the co-director of the Harvard CAPS-Harris poll, said the polling indicates
that “indicting Trump over Jan. 6 would be an explosively divisive issue in the country.”
“Despite a majority that would indict him, most questions on January 6th split down the middle
along partisan lines, and it’s not clear they would convict him,” Penn said.
“There is far greater support for healing the country over indicting politicians —
but Trump is seen as bearing a good share of personal responsibility. “
The House panel investigating the Capitol attack held a series of hearings from June through July
that argued Trump was directly responsible for the attack.
‘Accountability at the highest level’: Latest Jan. 6 news is bad for Trump
Lawmakers presented evidence that Trump attempted to pressure state electors, former Vice President
Mike Pence and the Justice Department to swing the 2020 election in his favor.
The panel also said he inspired the mob that stormed the federal building in a bid to stop certification
of the 2020 election and fanned the flames of the attack when he published an incendiary tweet
about Pence in the middle of the siege.
But 55 percent of voters said the Jan. 6 hearings were not conducted fairly, according
to the Harvard CAPS-Harris poll.
After the hearings concluded, the Justice Department announced it was probing Trump’s actions
in connection to Jan. 6, an announcement that is proving unpopular for Americans.
Most voters surveyed in the poll, or 61 percent, said the Justice Department investigation
and other related probes were politically motivated.
Ultimately, 69 percent of voters said the nation should move on from the Capitol attack,
according to the Harvard CAPS-Harris poll. And Trump remains one of the most popular
political figures, with 44 percent of voters having a favorable view of him.
Meanwhile, about 37 percent of voters saw President Biden as favorable.
The Harvard CAPS-Harris survey of 1,885 registered voters was conducted June 27-28.
It was a collaboration of the Center for American Political Studies at Harvard University
and the Harris Poll.
The survey is an online sample drawn from the Harris Panel and weighted to reflect known
demographics.
As a representative online sample, it does not report a probability confidence interval.
President Joe Biden calls Trump "The Former Guy"
In this article, he's just "Trump" and nothing else.
We should call him in the same way.
President just announced that the Al Quaeda Boss, Ayman al-Zawahiri, has been killed.
Now, there are three devils left in the world to be taken care of:
1. Vladimir Putin, Russia
2. Xi Jin Ping, Red China
3. Donald Trump, USA
Then, the world will be quiet and peaceful at least for a while.