USA TODAY US Edition

Poll: On Russia, more have faith in Mueller

57% have little or no trust in Trump’s denials; 58% trust investigat­ion

- Susan Page and Marilyn Icsman

WASHINGTON – When it comes to Russia, Americans have more trust in special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigat­ion than they do in President Trump’s denials of collusion, a USA TODAY/Suffolk University Poll finds.

By wide margins, those surveyed are convinced that Russians meddled in the 2016 presidenti­al election and that they will try it again. More than four in 10 say Moscow’s interferen­ce affected the outcome of the election that put Trump in the White House.

The poll, taken after Mueller’s team indicted 13 Russians and three companies on criminal charges, spotlights the potential perils ahead for the president if he ends up in a showdown with the special counsel. A 58% majority say they have a lot or some trust in Mueller’s investigat­ion, and a 57% majority say they have little or no trust in Trump’s denials.

“I think he’s doing a heck of a job,” John Shaw, 60, of Madison, Wis., said of Mueller. “He’s not leaking anything. He’s going piece by piece, methodical­ly putting this whole thing together.”

Lauryne Haynes, a retiree from Farmington Hills, Mich., puts her faith in the president. “I think that Trump had nothing to do with Russian meddling,” she said in a follow-up interview. “He understand­s the situation that they are not our friends. I think he’s truthful, and I think he’s sincere about wanting the best for the country.”

Three of four of those surveyed, 75%, say they take the charges filed by Mueller seriously; most of them say they take them very seriously. One in five, 20%, dismiss them as not particular­ly serious.

That represents some shift in views over the past year. In a USA TODAY/Suffolk Poll in March 2017, nearly one-third of those surveyed, 31%, said they saw the issue of Russian meddling as not very serious or not at all serious. Then,

63% called it very or somewhat serious. In the new poll, nearly seven in 10,

69%, say they believe Russians made a serious effort to meddle in the 2016 election. Fewer than one in five doubt that.

“They didn’t try to meddle, they did meddle,” says Nicholas Krasney, 30, of Los Angeles. “And of course, they affected the election, but whether they affected the outcome of the election, I can’t say.”

On that issue, there is an almost even split: 42% say Russian meddling affected the outcome of the election; 44% say it didn’t.

Views on that question reflect a sharp partisan divide. Democrats by more than 3-1, 69%-20%, say Russian meddling affected the election’s results. Republican­s by more than 7-1, 81%-11%, say it didn’t.

“Russia had an effect just by creating the divisivene­ss and really dividing the country into two shouting matches, from what I saw happen,” said Joyce Kaysor, 61, an accountant from Millsboro, Del., said in a follow-up interview.

William Hartgrove, 56, a systems engineer from Liberty Hill, Texas, said the election turned on other factors. “I think the candidate the Democrats pushed forward had a great deal more to do with that,” he said. Even so, he praised Mueller’s investigat­ion as worthwhile. “We can’t have our elections sold to any nation willing to invest a lot of money.”

There is a broad consensus, 76%

17%, that Russians will continue to try to meddle in American elections. Six in 10 say Trump isn’t doing enough to respond to that.

The indictment­s of the Russian individual­s and companies were an important step, said Sheila Buckingham, 70, a retiree from Huntington Beach, Calif. “It sends a message that the U.S. is serious,” she said.

Mueller’s level of credibilit­y is significan­t because of attacks by Trump and his allies on the profession­alism and non-partisansh­ip of the special counsel, the FBI and the Justice Department. Thirty-one percent express “a lot” of trust in Mueller and 27% some trust;

28% have little or no trust. In comparison, 24% have a lot of trust in Trump’s denials of collusion, and 12% have some trust; 57% have little or no trust.

Neither Trump nor Mueller has a particular­ly robust favorable rating: 34% for Trump, 37% for Mueller. Trump’s unfavorabl­e rating is 59%, giving him a net negative rating of 25 percentage points. Mueller’s unfavorabl­e rating is 23%, giving him a net positive rating of 14 points.

Only 8% say they are undecided or have never heard of Trump. For Mueller,

28% say they don’t know enough to have an opinion.

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