New polling suggests that the FBI’s search of Mar-a-Lago might be giving Trump a boost in popularity on the right. This news might be alarming for some who fear a more riled-up Trump electoral base. But it doesn’t mean the FBI was wrong to enforce the law.
As Axios notes in a roundup of recent polls, it appears Trump is enjoying an approval bump in the aftermath of the FBI executing its search warrant on Aug. 8. Earlier this summer, a series of polls showed Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis tied or competitive with Trump among Republicans in the critical primary state of New Hampshire. But the latest Saint Anselm College survey conducted there after the Mar-a-Lago search shows Trump back on top, with a massive 20-point lead. And a new NBC poll shows that while 34% of Republican voters said they supported Trump more than the GOP in May, 41% support him more post-Mar-a-Lago. These numbers, coupled with reports of GOP donors rallying behind the former president, have apparently scared some never-Trump Republicans into thinking the FBI search “put wind in Trump’s sails,” write Axios’ Jonathan Swan and Josh Kraushaar.
These polling trends were also broadly predictable.
If data like this continues to emerge, expect centrist skeptics of the FBI search to claim vindication: See, we warned you this would backfire politically. But such contrarian admonishments remain unpersuasive, for a number of reasons.
First of all, that same NBC poll cited in the Axios piece shows a clear majority — 57% of U.S. voters —believe investigations into Trump’s behavior should continue. That majority includes 92% of Democratic voters, 61% of independents and 21% of Republican voters. So while it’s possible that some Republicans are more inclined to mobilize behind Trump right now, based on the perception that he’s being persecuted, it’s premature to suggest that the FBI’s behavior is causing a cross-partisan backlash. Are moderate Republicans ready to shed their misgivings about Trump? There is no need to catastrophize just yet. We also need will more polling data to confirm this is actually a substantive and enduring trend.
These polling trends were also broadly predictable. After all, the contemporary right seems increasingly scandalized by even the most modest attempts to reform society or create more accountability for the powerful, whether through antiracism in schools or moderate police reform. So of course something like an FBI search of Trump’s home — an unprecedented bid for accountability for apparent presidential misconduct — was going to elicit extreme responses. If your metric for action is whether it will elicit backlash from the right, then you won’t be able to do much of anything at all.








