Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Poll: 1 in 4 Americans undecided about impeachmen­t

- Los Angeles Times (TNS)

WASHINGTON – Americans are divided about the impeachmen­t inquiry into President Donald Trump, and as the House prepares for public hearings next week, roughly 1 in 4 remain uncertain, providing a large audience that could be especially swayed by the evidence, a new poll shows.

Currently, 44% say the House should vote to impeach and 30% say it should not, according to the latest USC Dornsife/los Angeles Times nationwide poll. But 26% say they either don’t know or that it’s too soon to tell.

Those uncertain Americans will be a targeted audience when public hearings begin into Trump’s actions toward Ukraine. The hearings are scheduled to start Wednesday, with the first witness set to be William B. Taylor Jr., the top U.S. diplomat in that country.

Taylor has already told House investigat­ors in a deposition that Trump withheld aid from Ukraine as leverage to prod the country’s leaders into publicly announcing an investigat­ion into former Vice President Joe Biden, according to a transcript released Wednesday by House Democrats.

Asked whether the Senate should convict Trump and remove him from office if the House impeaches him, Americans split along lines nearly identical to their feelings about a House impeachmen­t vote, with 45% saying Trump should be removed, 28% saying he should not be and 28% saying they are unsure or that it’s too soon to say, the poll found.

Unlike many other recent surveys on impeachmen­t, the USC Dornsife/l.a. Times poll gave people the explicit choice of saying that they remained uncertain or that it was too soon to tell; many other polls allow people to volunteer that they haven’t made up their minds but don’t provide that as an explicit choice.

Compared with other polls that offer only “yes” or “no” options, offering uncertaint­y as a choice appears to reduce support for both sides, but not equally: Support for impeachmen­t appears more solid than opposition.

That finding is consistent with many other measuremen­ts regarding the president almost throughout his tenure: A large share of Americans solidly opposes him, a smaller share solidly backs him and a third group generally supports him but sometimes wavers.

In the current poll, for example, a majority of respondent­s, 52%, say they would be unhappy if Trump were reelected, and just 30% say they would be happy. While 40% say they would be “completely unhappy,” about half of that number say they’d be “completely happy,” and 18% sit in the middle.

The roughly 1 in 4 Americans who say that they haven’t made up their minds on impeachmen­t provide a potentiall­y important but elusive audience for the two warring sides.

The groups most likely to remain undecided include independen­ts and people who describe themselves as only leaning toward the Republican­s. The undecided also tend to be younger than average: More than a third of people younger than 35 say they are uncertain, but only a fifth of those 65 and older replied the same.

But a key fact about the undecided is that they haven’t been paying much attention. The 60% of Americans who say they are following news about impeachmen­t at least “somewhat closely” have mostly made up their minds. Among the people who say they remain uncertain, about two-thirds say they aren’t following the issue closely.

That’s typical in today’s highly polarized political environmen­t: The people who pay most attention to news tend to be the most partisan. One challenge for the House Democrats managing the impeachmen­t hearings will be whether televised public hearings can grab the attention of those who, so far, have mostly tuned out the case.

Expectatio­ns could provide another challenge. Most Americans don’t expect to see Trump removed from office as a result of the impeachmen­t process. On average, those polled gave removal about a 30% likelihood of it happening. Even Democrats, on average, gave it only about a 40% chance of happening.

The impeachmen­t debate does not appear to have changed Trump’s prospects for reelection, which were dicey before and haven’t improved.

Like most other national surveys this year, the current poll shows most Americans saying they plan to vote against Trump for reelection. Just over half of those polled, 54%, said they would vote for the eventual Democratic candidate, 33% said they plan to vote for Trump, and 13% said they expect to vote for someone else. In past elections, support for a third party almost always dwindles as the election gets closer.

The poll’s findings are roughly consistent with other surveys that have tested Trump against Democratic opponents nationally, although he does better in matchups with specific Democratic candidates in closely divided battlegrou­nd states.

Strategist­s in both parties typically believe Trump will lose the popular vote in 2020, perhaps by an even larger margin than in 2016. Trump’s campaign aides maintain that he can win reelection by once again eking out narrow victories in key states even as he loses big elsewhere. A lot of Americans seem to share that belief – those polled give Trump just over a 50% chance of winning again.

Looking at the field of Democrats vying to run against Trump, the poll finds Biden leading nationally, with 28% of the vote, compared with 16% for Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachuse­tts; 13% for Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont; 6% for Mayor Pete Buttigieg of South Bend, Ind.; and 4% for Sen. Kamala Harris of California. No other candidate gets more than 2%.

Since previous USC/LOS Angeles Times polls, Harris’ standing has dropped steadily, from 10% in July to 8% in September to 4% now. Warren’s backing has continued to rise and is now four times higher than it was in April, when the poll first measured the candidates. Buttigieg’s support has also grown.

Both Buttigieg and Warren have shown more support in recent polls in Iowa and New Hampshire, the states with the first contests in the nomination race, where the candidates have done the most campaignin­g.

But the current poll continues to show a lot of churn. That, plus the 21% of people who remain undecided, suggests the race remains unsettled.

“The undecided voters are a very big opportunit­y for things to change,” said Jill Darling, the survey’s director.

Because the poll surveys the same panel of people each month, it can track how voters stay with or change their minds about candidates. Most of the leading candidates held on to about two-thirds or more of the voters who backed them in September. Harris was the notable exception – she held on to only about one-third.

THE

 ?? ABACAPRESS.COM/TNS ?? U.S. President Donald Trump arrives to deliver remarks on Federal Judicial Confirmati­on Milestones in the East Room of the White House in Washington on November 6, 2019. Trump hosts the event to celebrate the confirmati­on of more than 150 Federal judges.
ABACAPRESS.COM/TNS U.S. President Donald Trump arrives to deliver remarks on Federal Judicial Confirmati­on Milestones in the East Room of the White House in Washington on November 6, 2019. Trump hosts the event to celebrate the confirmati­on of more than 150 Federal judges.

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