GOP enthusiasm for prosecuting Capitol rioters has fallen Pew poll finds
A sizable majority of Republicans and Republican-leaning independents, 57%, still say itâs at least somewhat important that federal law enforcement agencies find and prosecute those who broke into and rioted at the US Capitol â" but thatâs down from 79% in a March poll. Only about one-quarter now consider such prosecutions very important, down from half who felt that way in the spring.
By contrast, opinion among Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents has remained largely stable and near-unanimous: 95% currently say prosecuting rioters is at least somewhat important, and 80% say that itâs very important. Overall, 78% of Americans still say itâs important.
The sizable drop in enthusiasm among Republicans for prosecuting the rioters comes after a months-long campaign by prominent right-wing figures to whitewash the insurrection.
In addition, many of these Republicans have explicitly spoken out in defense of the rioters and have described them as patriotic, innocent Americans who are now being prosecuted by a corrupt Justice Department. A sparsely attended rally on Capitol grounds earlier this month attracted international attention because it was held in support of rioters facing criminal charges.About half of Americans, 48%, say that the criminal penalties faced by Capitol rioters havenât been severe enough, with 20% calling them too severe and 29% saying theyâre about right. But there are again striking partisan contours: A 71% majority of Democrats, but just 19% of Republicans, think the criminal penalties meted out should have been more severe.
There are also fault lines within the GOP, the survey finds. Republicans who acknowledged in a previous survey that President Joe Biden won the 2020 election are 25 percentage points likelier than those who falsely claimed Trump won to say prosecuting rioters is very important, and 29 points less likely to think rioters have been punished too severely. Roughly two-thirds of Republicans fall into the camp that believed Trump won.
Most of the nearly 620 cases brought so far in connection with the attack havenât reached sentencing. That hasnât stopped partisans on both sides from engaging in a public debate over what punishments are appropriate â" with many Democratic politicians unsurprisingly calling for hefty prison sentences, while some Republican leaders have gone as far as saying the charges should be dropped. Only seven defendants have been sentenced so far. These cases have all involved people who werenât accused of violence, which reduces the chances of incarceration. Four of the seven defendants got probation or house arrest. The other three were sentenced to jail or prison, though two received credit for time already served. One reported to federal prison last week.But the sentences for these early cases arenât necessarily representative of the full universe of defendants. Things are progressing slowly for the more serious cases involving assaults against police or conspiracies with extremist groups.
Despite ongoing public concern about the aftereffects of the riot, most Americans arenât closely following the congressional investigation into January 6. Just 11% say theyâve heard or read a lot about the House committee investigating the riot, with 57% saying theyâve heard only a little, and another 31% that theyâve heard nothing at all.
Theyâre also unlikely to express much confidence in the committee, with only 11% saying theyâre very confident that the investigation will be fair and reasonable, another third saying that theyâre somewhat confident, and more than half expressing little or no confidence in the investigation.
The low marks for the committee are consistent with Americansâ dim view of Congress. But it also suggests that the GOP gamble to kill an independent commission is already paying off.
In May, Senate Republicans blocked the creation of a January 6 commission that would have had five members from each party. Without a commission, House Democrats launched their own inquiry, which Republicans have slammed as a partisan sham intended to hurt Trump. The makeup of the committee is unique: It has a lopsided 7-to-2 Democratic majority because most Republicans boycotted the panel; two anti-Trump Republicans later signed on. GOP leaders initiated the boycott after House Speaker Nancy Pelosi refused to seat some of the proposed Republican members due to their votes in favor of overturning the results of the 2020 election. So far, the committee has taken aim at Trump and his inner circle by requesting documents and issuing subpoenas. The first and only public hearing was held last month, with gripping and emotional testimony from four police officers who fought on the front lines of the January 6 siege.Pew surveyed 10,371 US adults on Sept. 13-19, using a nationally representative online panel. The margin of sampling error for the full sample of 10,371 respondents is plus or minus 1.6 percentage points.
0 Response to "GOP enthusiasm for prosecuting Capitol rioters has fallen Pew poll finds"
Post a Comment