Los Angeles Times

48% in poll say Trump should be charged

Majority believe the ex-president bears a great deal or quite a bit of responsibi­lity for Jan. 6 insurrecti­on.

- By Farnoush Amiri and Nuha Dolby Amiri and Dolby write for the Associated Press. AP writer Hannah Fingerhut contribute­d to this report.

WASHINGTON — About half of Americans believe former President Trump should be charged with a crime for his role in the U.S. Capitol attack on Jan. 6, 2021, a poll shows.

The survey from the Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research finds that 48% of U.S. adults say the Republican former president should be charged with a crime for his role, while 31% say he should not be charged. An additional 20% say they don’t know enough to have an opinion. Fifty-eight percent say Trump bears a great deal or quite a bit of responsibi­lity for what happened that day.

The poll was conducted after five public hearings by the House committee investigat­ing Jan. 6, a panel that has sought to illustrate Trump’s potential criminal culpabilit­y in the events that led to the deadly insurrecti­on. But it was taken before Tuesday’s surprise hearing featuring former Trump White House aide Cassidy Hutchinson. Her explosive testimony provided the most compelling evidence yet that the former president could be linked to a federal crime, experts say.

Views on Trump’s criminal liability break down predictabl­y along party lines, with 86% of Democrats but only 10% of Republican­s saying Trump should be charged with a crime. Among Republican­s, 68% say he should not be charged and 21% say they don’t know. Still, the fact that nearly half the country believes he should be prosecuted is a remarkable position for the former president, pointing to the difficulti­es he could face if he makes another run at the White House in 2024.

For Ella Metze, a South Carolina Democrat, Trump’s culpabilit­y has been clear from the beginning, when he urged his supporters to march to the Capitol on the morning of Jan. 6 and “fight like hell.”

“It was meant to provoke violence because he kept encouragin­g them,” the 86year-old told the Associated Press. “As it happened, I watched it all and I just thought why doesn’t somebody stop this? Why doesn’t he stop this?”

Chris Schloemer, a Texas independen­t, agreed Trump holds responsibi­lity for egging on the crowd with his baseless claims of election fraud. But the 61-year-old doesn’t lay the blame solely on Trump.

Schloemer believes Republican­s in Congress have a hand in what happened that day too: “I feel like people were afraid of Donald Trump, especially Republican politician­s, and so they wouldn’t rein him in, and I think that just emboldened him.”

And he’s not alone. While views of Trump’s role have not changed since December, Americans are somewhat more likely now than they were then to say Republican­s in Congress were significan­tly responsibl­e for the events of Jan. 6.

Forty-six percent say that now, up from 41% in December. An additional 21% say GOP lawmakers had some responsibi­lity, and 30% say they were not responsibl­e. The change in the share saying Republican­s in Congress have a large amount of responsibi­lity was driven mostly by Democrats and independen­ts.

Ulysses Bryant, a Democrat from Florida, said that while he always believed Trump and the rioters should be charged with a crime, he hadn’t known of the involvemen­t of congressio­nal Republican­s until he began to follow the hearings.

Close to 6 in 10 Americans — 56% — say they followed news about the congressio­nal hearings. A smaller but still sizable share — 42% — say they watched or listened.

The nine-member panel, comprising seven Democrats and two Republican­s, has worked for the last year to investigat­e the connection between Trump and his allies and the violence and chaos that ensued at the Capitol. The public hearing phase of their investigat­ion is meant to put all of that work on display to the American public in an effort to create a historical record of what occurred.

Seventy-five percent of Democrats and 42% of Republican­s say they followed news about the hearings. More Democrats than Republican­s also say they tuned in, 58% to 27%. The first of the public hearings, which began in early June, received high ratings for TV viewership, though subsequent hearings have received more modest ratings.

Kathlyn Keller, a retired investment banker from San Francisco, is one of the GOP voters who has tuned into the hearings and still believes Trump holds no responsibi­lity for the events of that day.

The 83-year-old thinks the only people who should be charged are those who brought weapons to the Capitol, or anyone who got into the building and caused damage inside. Trump “absolutely shouldn’t be charged with anything,” she told the AP.

The committee plans to continue its congressio­nal investigat­ion and present new evidence in the coming weeks to its many viewers, including the most important one: Atty. Gen. Merrick Garland. Regardless of public opinion about Trump’s likely criminal involvemen­t, lawmakers continue to face a stark reality: While they can investigat­e Jan. 6 and issue subpoenas to gather informatio­n, only the Justice Department can bring criminal charges.

But there are clear signs in recent weeks that the Justice Department appears to be escalating its investigat­ion of pro-Trump efforts to overturn the 2020 election. Federal agents recently seized the cellphone of Trump lawyer John Eastman, who put forth a plan to pressure then-Vice President Mike Pence into rejecting the electoral college results.

Last week, authoritie­s searched the Virginia home of Jeffrey Clark, who was known at the Justice Department to champion Trump’s false claims of election fraud.

Agents also served subpoenas to the Republican Party chairmen of Arizona, Nevada and Georgia, three states that went for Democrat Joe Biden and where Trump allies created fake slates of “alternate electors” intended to subvert the vote. And Republican­s in two other states — Michigan and Pennsylvan­ia — disclosed they had been interviewe­d by the FBI.

The poll of 1,053 adults was conducted June 23-27 using a sample drawn from NORC’s probabilit­y-based AmeriSpeak Panel, which is designed to be representa­tive of the U.S. population. The margin of sampling error for all respondent­s is plus or minus 4 percentage points.

 ?? Andrew Harnik Associated Press ?? MEMBERS OF Congress, wearing emergency gas masks, evacuate from the House gallery on Jan. 6, 2021. In the poll, 86% of Democrats but only 10% of Republican­s said Donald Trump should be charged with a crime.
Andrew Harnik Associated Press MEMBERS OF Congress, wearing emergency gas masks, evacuate from the House gallery on Jan. 6, 2021. In the poll, 86% of Democrats but only 10% of Republican­s said Donald Trump should be charged with a crime.

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