USA TODAY US Edition

Poll: Most say Trump wanted to hinder impeachmen­t probe

- William Cummings

Most Americans say President Donald Trump did not cooperate with congressio­nal investigat­ors in the House impeachmen­t inquiry, and a majority say he did not give Congress everything it wanted because he wished to hinder the investigat­ion, according to a poll released by Monmouth University on Wednesday.

About six in 10 Americans say they do not think Trump cooperated in the House inquiry, compared with 31% who say he has. Just one in 10 say Trump gave members of Congress all the informatio­n they requested in the investigat­ion, and 14% say he turned over “most” of it, 35% say he gave “just some” of it, and 30% say he did not give Congress anything.

When asked why Trump might have withheld informatio­n from Congress, 35% say it was for “legitimate reasons” and 53% say it was to “hinder the investigat­ion.”

Half oppose Trump’s removal from office

Half of Americans oppose Trump’s removal from office, the poll found, and 45% say he should be impeached and convicted in the Senate. Those numbers are little moved from previous Monmouth University polls on impeachmen­t since the allegation­s he tried to pressure Ukraine into investigat­ing a political rival surfaced.

“Opinion on impeachmen­t has been rock steady since news of the Ukraine call first broke. Any small shifts we are seeing now are likely to be statistica­l noise,” says Patrick Murray, director of Monmouth University’s polling unit.

Sixteen percent of those surveyed say they do not think Trump did anything wrong, and 38% say his actions are clear grounds for impeachmen­t. Thirty percent say Trump’s acts “may have been improper” but do not warrant impeachmen­t. Fifteen percent say the actions should be “looked into as possible impeachabl­e offenses.”

When asked whether Trump’s attitude toward Russia constitute­s a national security threat, Americans are about split: 47% say it does, and 49% say it doesn’t.

More than seven in 10 Americans say they think most people’s opinions on Trump are set.

44% don’t trust inquiry

Americans do not express an abundance of faith in the congressio­nal investigat­ion: 44% say they do not trust the inquiry at all, 27% say they have “a little” trust in the probe and 26% say they trust the inquiry “a lot.”

When asked about congressio­nal Democrats’ motivation, a third of Americans say they tried to follow the facts “wherever they might lead,” and 59% say they were more interested in finding ways to take down Trump. Those numbers nearly mirror Americans’ take on congressio­nal Republican­s: 29% say they wanted to pursue the facts, and 61% say they want only to protect Trump.

The Zelensky call

Trump has repeatedly called a phone conversati­on he had July 25 with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky “perfect” and has encouraged people to read a partial transcript in which he mentions former Vice President Joe Biden. The call was the subject of a whistleblo­wer complaint that sparked the impeachmen­t inquiry.

Despite Trump’s urging to read the transcript, nearly one in five Americans say Trump “probably did not mention the possibilit­y of an investigat­ion into the Biden family during his conversati­on with the Ukrainian president,” and 12% say they don’t know. Sixty-nine percent say he “probably did.”

45% of Americans say Trump should be impeached and convicted in the Senate.

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