Four years after Jan. 6 Capitol riot, polls show some attitudes softening

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Congress is expected to certify President-elect Donald Trump’s November victory on Monday as part of the peaceful transfer of power that has marked every U.S. presidential election – except one.

Four years ago, Trump supporters stormed the U.S. Capitol to try to stop the tally of electoral votes that would make Joe Biden’s victory official. Five people died during or after the riot. About 140 or more law enforcement officers were injured. Mr. Trump was charged with trying to overturn the election results. And more than 1,500 people have been charged with offenses ranging from disorderly conduct to assault. More than 500 have been sentenced to periods of incarceration.

Why We Wrote This

Polls show Americans’ views have softened toward Jan. 6 rioters and Donald Trump’s role that day. But his vow to issue pardons doesn’t sit well.

“We nearly lost America” on Jan. 6, 2021, President Biden said.

But surveys suggest that as time passes, fewer Americans agree with that sentiment.

In a Washington Post/University of Maryland poll from December 2021, more than half of respondents said punishments for rioters were “not harsh enough.” Two years later, in the same survey, that number fell to 38%.

“We get more and more forgiving as time goes on,” says Republican strategist Sam Chen.

But in a December 2024 Post/UMD poll, two-thirds of respondents said they don’t support the Trump idea of pardons for Jan. 6 defendants.

Congress is expected to certify President-elect Donald Trump’s November victory on Monday as part of the peaceful transfer of power that has marked every U.S. presidential election – except one.

Four years ago, Trump supporters attacked the U.S. Capitol, trying to stop the tally of electoral votes that would make Joe Biden’s victory official.

Lawmakers evacuated. Five people died during or after the riot. About 140 or more law enforcement officers were injured. Mr. Trump was federally charged with trying to overturn the election results, and more than 1,500 people have been charged with offenses ranging from disorderly conduct to assault, according to an NPR database. More than 500 have been sentenced to periods of incarceration.

Why We Wrote This

Polls show Americans’ views have softened toward Jan. 6 rioters and Donald Trump’s role that day. But his vow to issue pardons doesn’t sit well.

“We nearly lost America” on Jan. 6, 2021, is how President Biden has described that day.

Public opinion surveys suggest that as time passes, fewer Americans agree with that sentiment.

In a Washington Post/University of Maryland poll from December 2021, more than half of respondents said legal punishments for rioters were “not harsh enough.” Two years later, in the same survey, that number fell to 38% – and more than 1 in 4 said the punishments were “too harsh.” Those who answered the survey also had softened on Mr. Trump’s actions – from 43% saying he bore “a great deal” of responsibility to 37%, and from 24% saying he bore no responsibility at all to 28%.


SOURCE:

Washington Post/University of Maryland, Quinnipiac University

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Jacob Turcotte/Staff

Mike Hanmer, director of the Center for Democracy and Civic Engagement at the University of Maryland, says he thinks Republicans have been gaining in the influence game in terms of the way Jan. 6 is perceived – specifically, Mr. Trump’s message that it’s he and his supporters who are under attack.

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