As the Jan. 6 hearings begin Thursday night in primetime, new polling shows 65% percent of voters support the House investigation, while only 28% oppose it, according to a new Courier Newsroom/Data for Progress poll.
Nearly 18 months after supporters of former President Donald Trump launched a deadly siege on the US Capitol and tried to overturn the 2020 election results, polling shows that voters remain concerned about the long-term impact of the Jan. 6 attackโand want accountability.
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A new Courier Newsroom/Data for Progress poll finds that 61% of likely voters are โveryโ or โsomewhatโ concerned that Trump Republicans will promote violence to achieve political goals in future elections. Another 10% are a โlittle concernedโ about the possibility. Only 29% of voters say theyโre not concerned at all.
The findings come as the US House Committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack will hold the first of six public hearings Thursday night in primetime.
The hearings are expected to delve into many different aspects of the investigation, including Trumpโs promotion of the โBig Lieโ that the 2020 election was stolen, his attempt to pressure Vice President Mike Pence to illegally throw out electoral votes for then President-elect Joe Biden, his calls for supporters to assemble in Washington D.C. to โStop the Steal,โ and his failure to call off the violence for more than three hours after the attack on the Capitol began.
Trumpโs Republican allies have tried to dismiss the hearings and the House investigation as political gamesmanship, but it would appear voters arenโt buying it. Roughly two-thirds of voters (65%) support the House investigation, while 28% oppose it.
The survey also found that most voters blame Trump for what happened on Jan. 6 and believe he should be held accountable.
- When reminded of what happened in the weeks leading up to Jan. 6, 57% of voters said Trump bears โa lotโ or โsomeโ responsibility for the attack. Twenty-nine percent said he bears no responsibility at all.
- Fifty-six percent of voters believe individuals and groupsโincluding elected officials like then-president Trumpโwho helped fuel the attack should be held criminally responsible for what happened that day.
The hearings are also expected to highlight efforts by Trumpโs allies to help keep him in office or return him to office after Biden was inaugurated.
Since Election Day 2020, Republican lawmakers across the country have tried to discredit or overturn the election results. Seven of the eight Republican members of North Carolinaโs congressional delegation were among the 139 House Republicans who voted to overturn the 2020 election results.
And a recent New York Times analysis of nine key swing states, including North Carolina, found that 357 sitting Republican politiciansโamounting to 44% of all Republican legislators across the nine statesโhave used the power of their office to discredit or try to overturn the 2020 election results.
In multiple states won by President Biden, more than 70% of Republican lawmakersโunder pressure from former President Trumpโtook such actions, which include attempts to delay the vote count, support for lawsuits intended to overturn the election, support for sending alternate slates of electors to Congress (to override the will of voters), and attempts to manually decertify election resultsโan idea that is actually impossible, according to experts.
Legislators in North Carolina didnโt face the same kind of pressure since Trump won the state.
Fifty-six percent of voters oppose these efforts, while 33% support them. However, a majority of Republicans polled (54%) approve of such proposals, highlighting the lasting and corrosive impact of the โBig Lie.โ
While Republicans have repeatedly alleged voter fraud, theyโve failed to provide legitimate proof to back up their claims, and an enormous body of evidence shows there was no widespread fraud during the election.
While efforts behind the โBig Lieโ have repeatedly failed, theyโve achieved a destructive impact on Republicansโ faith in elections. A majority of Republican voters now do not believe Biden was legitimately elected, despite ample evidence to the contrary.
Furthermore, supporting Trumpโs โBig Lieโ has become a litmus test among Republican base voters. The former president has spent much of the past year endorsing candidates who embraced his lies and discredited his 2020 loss.
Itโs still a toss-up as to whether repeating the false narratives about 2020 will hurt or help Republicansโ electoral prospects with more moderate voters and independents.
Slightly more than half of voters polled (51%) viewed the siege at the Capitol and the continued claims that the election was stolen as attacks on the country. Conversely, 39% said the events of Jan. 6 were the result of โlegitimate concernsโ about the election and were not an attack on the U.S.
Further underscoring the uncertainty ahead, 50% of voters said they would be less likely to vote for a candidate who still claims the 2020 election was rigged, and 46% said theyโd be less likely to vote for a candidate who worked to overturn the 2020 election.
Roughly one in 5 voters said theyโd be more likely to vote for a candidate who continues to argue the election was rigged or has taken steps to put Trump back in office.
Methodology: From May 27 to 31, 2022, Data for Progress conducted a survey of 1,220 likely voters nationally using web panel respondents. The sample was weighted to be representative of likely voters by age, gender, education, race, and voting history. The survey was conducted in English. The margin of error is ยฑ3 percentage points. N=1,220 unless otherwise specified. Some values may not add up to 100 due to rounding.


















