The Guardian Australia

More than 40% in US do not believe Biden legitimate­ly won election – poll

- Maya Yang

More than 40% of Americans still do not believe that Joe Biden legitimate­ly won the 2020 presidenti­al election despite no evidence of widespread voter fraud, according to a new AxiosMomen­tive poll.

The poll, released on the eve of the first anniversar­y of the attack on the Capitol by a pro-Trump mob, found that 55% of those surveyed believe Biden won the election. That figure has barely changed since Axios’s poll from 2020, published shortly before the insurrecti­on. That poll, published in 2020, found 58% said that they accepted Biden as the legitimate winner of the presidenti­al election.

Despite Biden’s inaugurati­on, the attack on the Capitol and the multiple investigat­ions that have debunked the lies pushed by the former president that the election was stolen, the poll suggests that the same level of doubt persists.

“It’s dispiritin­g to see that this shocking thing we all witnessed last year hasn’t changed people’s perception­s,” Laura Wronski, senior manager for research science at Momentive, told Axios.

A majority of Americans also said they are expecting a repeat of the deadly 6 January attack in the next few years.

The polls, conducted from 1 to 5 January of this year, surveyed nearly 2,700 adults, and found nearly 57% – about half of Republican­s and seven in 10 Democrats – believe that events similar to the attack are likely to occur again.

In addition, nearly two-thirds or 63% said that the 6 January attack has at least temporaril­y changed the way they think about their democratic government. A third said that those changes are temporary. Nearly as many, 31%, said that those changes are permanent.

About 37% of those surveyed said they had lost faith in American democracy (48% of Republican­s and 28% of Democrats), while 10% said they had never had faith in the system. Fortynine percent said they did have faith.

Fifty-eight per cent of Americans said they supported the investigat­ive work of the House select committee investigat­ing the riot. Eighty-eight percent of Democrats support the inquiry, compared with 58% of independen­ts and 32% of Republican­s.

Just slightly more than half of American adults, 51%, said individual­s associated with the insurrecti­on should face criminal penalties if they refuse to comply with subpoenas.

Republican­s have also been revealed to be three or four more times as likely as Democrats to say voter fraud is a problem in their state, despite such claims being thoroughly debunked.

Wronski said she believes the results of the poll shows either “Biden hasn’t done enough” to push back against disinforma­tion, or “it shows that he never had a chance”.

She added: “The partisan division is still the story.”

• This article was amended on 6 January 2022 to correct the breakdown by party of responses related to support for the House select committee investigat­ion, and faith in American democracy.

 ?? Photograph: Shannon Stapleton/Reuters ?? Pro-Trump protesters storm the US Capitol a year ago.
Photograph: Shannon Stapleton/Reuters Pro-Trump protesters storm the US Capitol a year ago.

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