AdChoices
Alternet
Follow
Multiple polls suggest GOP could be 'burnt to a crisp' if Donald Trump is the nominee in 2024
Story by Brandon Gage • Yesterday 10:00 AM
Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg's historic thirty-four-felony-count indictment of former President Donald Trump has rattled the American political landscape and introduced an unprecedented dynamic into the 2024 race for the White House.
WASHINGTON, DC - SEPTEMBER 27: U.S. President Donald Trump reacts to a question during a news conference in the Briefing Room of the White House on September 27, 2020 in Washington, DC. Trump is preparing for the first presidential debate with former Vice President and Democratic Nominee Joe Biden on September 29th in Cleveland, Ohio.© provided by AlterNet
While Trump's Make America Great Again movement aided by its right-wing media allies has painted Trump as a 'martyr' and predicted that Trump's accumulating legal entanglements are a boon to his candidacy, fresh data suggests that the public is starting to accept that the embattled ex-commander in chief may have committed criminal acts.
Chase Hiring Now - Full & Part-Time Jobs
Ad
www.everyjobforme.com/Chase/Apply
"A majority of Americans (53%) believe he intentionally did something illegal, according to a new ABC News/Ipsos
poll. An additional 11% say he acted wrongly but not intentionally. Only 20% believe Trump did not do anything wrong, and 16% say they don't know, per the ABC News/Ipsos poll conducted using Ipsos' KnowledgePanel," ABC News reported on Sunday.
READ MORE: Newt Gingrich declares Donald Trump a 'martyr' like 'Joan of Arc'
"The announcement of formal charges has nudged public opinion slightly against Trump, particularly among independent voters. As of April 1, exactly half of the public said the charges against Trump were either very or somewhat serious, and 36% said they were not," the outlet explained. "Now, after the indictment has been unsealed and the public has heard Trump's
condemnation of the investigation, 52% find the charges very or somewhat serious, and 39% deem the charges not too serious or not serious at all."
Yet ABC's findings may not be an outlier. During a discussion on Saturday's
edition of
CNN Newsroom With Jim Acosta, the namesake host noted to married colleagues John Avlon and Margaret Hoover that a survey conducted by their network indicated that Trump's reelection chances are collapsing.
"I want to ask you about one more thing, guys, and that is, I mean, there's so much that has happened since last Tuesday. It feels like maybe a couple of years ago, but it was just several days ago that Donald Trump became the first current or past president to be indicted and arraigned. And I just wonder, doesn't this continue to be good for Trump in the party and the Republican Party but terrible in the general election?" Acosta asked his guests.
"Well, it is like I tell my husband – I'm doing a side eye right here because I saw him make-up fight – the truth is, you're right, Jim," Hoover responded. "This is good for Trump and the party. It has solidified his front-runner status for the Republican nomination right at the moment. I mean, that’s what’s happened. These are $7 million in the last week – 25 percent at least of those dollars are new dollars – and the base of the Republican Party seems to really be rallying around him and doing an us-against-them, you know, the Department of Justice, rule of law against Trump. It's a bizarre turn of events, but it's real."
READ MORE: Watch: Mary Trump and podcast panel relentlessly taunt Donald Trump amid his week of legal woes
Related video: OTR: Has indictment made Trump's hold on GOP stronger? (WCVB Boston)
We're ready to go with the Sunday round table.
Video Player is loading.
Loaded: 9.66%
Pause
Current Time 0:00
/
Duration 4:08
Quality Settings
Captions
Fullscreen
WCVB Boston
OTR: Has indictment made Trump's hold on GOP stronger?
Unmute
0
View on Watch
Avlon expanded upon that idea and offered a grim prediction about where the GOP is headed.
"Yeah. It's a reaction. It's a reaction. Let's be real about that. And to your point about, you know, Trump's resurgence being, you know, a poison pill for a general election, what CNN's new poll is showing only 26 percent of Independent voters support approval of Donald Trump. Over 60 percent thought an indictment was justified. Only 8 percent said it was, had had no merit at all. Those are Independent voters who end up making the decisions in general elections. So you know the party — you know, he may thrive on the oxygen of attention – but if that moth keeps going to that flame, it's going to be burnt to a crisp," Avlon opined.
Acosta agreed.
"Right," he said. "And with other potential indictments coming, other trials potentially coming down the pike, I can't imagine that the numbers you just mentioned, John, heading in the right direction for Trump and the Republican Party when it comes to a general election campaign."