Most Americans think Trump's allegations in Georgia election case too serious: poll


In the week since former President Donald Trump was impeached for a fourth term, a majority (63%) of Americans said the Georgia Supreme Court-approved charges related to the move to cancel the state's 2020 election were serious ( 47). According to a new ABC News/Ipsos survey, that number is negative (16%) or negative (16%).


Trump's new indictment, filed Monday in Fulton County, charges him and 18 others with what District Attorney Fani Willis called a "criminal effort to manipulate Georgia's presidential election results." .


Trump has pleaded not guilty and said the four charges against him were politically motivated and "not in the spirit of America," which prosecutors have denied. He has pleaded not guilty to three previous charges but has yet to appear in Georgia court.


The public perception of the scale of Trump's recent charges is similar to an ABC News/Ipsos survey conducted in early August following his Jan. 6 allegations and attempted hacking It was carried out shortly after being impeached by the capital's Supreme Court. He lost to Joe Biden in 2020.


The poll found that 65 percent of Americans think Trump's criminal behavior is a bad thing or a bad thing.


More: Impeachment could be Trump's biggest legal challenge: Analysis


Only a quarter of seniors said they had very serious doubts this week at all (10%) or not at all (15%). In early August, the same number (24%) said the costs associated with Trump's Jan. 6 inauguration were not significant.


A majority of Americans (49%) think Trump should be charged in the Georgia case, while 32% think he should not have been convicted. According to an ABC News/Ipsos poll conducted using Ipsos KnowledgePanel, 50 percent of Americans think Trump should end his presidential campaign, while 33 percent think he shouldn't.


Meanwhile, a majority (49%) believe the allegations against Trump in Georgia are political, while 35% think they are not. All of these results are similar to a survey conducted shortly after Trump's Jan. 6 inauguration.


These results suggest that Trump's payments are viewed as more serious than the two Georgia charges for not voting earlier this year.


Former President Donald Trump speaks at the 56th Annual Silver Statue Gala in Columbia, South Carolina, August. May 5, 2023. Doug Mills/The New York Times via Redux He ignored and agreed. After he left office, it was very difficult to restore government secrecy; fewer (30%) said New York City's behavior in providing money to famous actors in the days before the 2016 election was very serious.


In this week's poll, 47% believe Georgia is overvalued. However, 51 percent thought Trump's payment would affect January. 6 is very difficult.


ABC News/Ipsos has a new investigation after Attorney General Merrick Garland on Friday appointed Delaware U.S. Attorney David Weiss as special counsel to investigate Joe Bailey The case of President Biden's son Hunter Biden refusing to pay taxes. reason.


A majority of Americans (48%) do not believe the DOJ is properly investigating Hunter Biden, but only 32% expressed confidence in the investigation.


Mr Biden and Mr Trump — the leaders of their respective 2024 parties — went underwater in the largest numbers in the week that the trial of the president's son was handed over to secret agents and the former president was indicted. But that hasn't changed in the two weeks since Trump's release.


With both Biden and Trump at 31%, most Americans view both Biden (54%) and Trump (55%) unfavorably.


Methodology - This ABC News/Ipsos survey was conducted among 508 U.S. respondents in English and Spanish on August 15-16, 2023, using Ipsos Public Affairs' KnowledgePanel®. aldult. The margin of sampling error for the results is 4.7 points (including the graph). The proportion of political parties is 26%, 25%, and 41%, which are Democrats, Republicans, and independents, respectively. See top voting results and process details here.



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