Even as hearings that could lead to President Donald Trump’s impeachment heat up, a new Marquette University Law School poll of Wisconsin registered voters finds consistent, if sometimes modest, shifts in public opinion away from support of impeachment and toward supporting Trump in next year’s presidential election. CONT. Charles Franklin, […] Read more »
Sondland Ties Trump And Top Administration Officials To Quid Pro Quo
On the fourth day of public impeachment hearings, U.S. ambassador to the European Union Gordon Sondland took questions from the ranking members of the intelligence committee and their lawyers. Sondland testified that there was a quid pro quo arrangement Trump was pushing for. CONT. FiveThirtyEight Read more »
Ipsos/FiveThirtyEight panel survey: Most Americans Think Trump Committed An Impeachable Offense
… The initial wave of our survey found that even before articles of impeachment against Trump have been drafted, 56 percent of Americans agree that he has committed an impeachable offense. … The survey also indicated, crucially, that a significant chunk of Americans are still persuadable when it comes to […] Read more »
Americans remain split on impeachment after public hearings begin
Days into public impeachment hearings, nearly half of Americans want Congress to impeach President Donald Trump and remove him from office, according to a new poll from the PBS NewsHour, NPR and Marist. The latest data does not show a significant change in public attitudes since the hearings began last […] Read more »
Americans Overwhelmingly Say Impeachment Hearings Won’t Change Their Minds
The country is witnessing one of only a handful of times in its history that Congress has gone through with public hearings on whether to impeach a president. And yet, the overwhelming majority of Americans across parties say nothing they hear in the inquiry will change their minds on impeachment, […] Read more »
The least useful question in impeachment coverage
The only thing less reliable than the media’s ability to predict presidential nominees months in advance of the first primary votes may be the infamous question “Did it move the needle?” … It is not as if we lack for credible polling, which are a wee bit more accurate than […] Read more »