Fox News released a national poll last week that was rather brutal for the White House. The data from Donald Trump’s favorite network showed, among other things, that 51% of Americans support the president’s impeachment and removal from office. The same results pointed to large segments of the population criticizing Trump’s “dealings with the Ukrainian president.”
Not surprisingly, a variety of news outlets, including the New York Times, took note of the Fox poll. According to Trump, that’s a mistake.
President Trump on Monday blasted The New York Times for using in one of its stories last week’s Fox News poll that said a majority of respondents wanted his impeachment.
“The Fox Impeachment poll has turned out to be incorrect,” he tweeted Monday. “This was announced on Friday. Despite this, the Corrupt New York Times used this poll in one of its stories, no mention of the correction which they knew about full well!”
In reality, there was no correction to “mention.” The president appeared to reference this New York Post piece, which argued that the sample in the Fox News poll included too many Democrats.
“Princeton, New Jersey, pollster Braun Research, which conducted the survey, noted 48% of its respondents were Democrats,” the New York Post‘s analysis read. “But the actual breakdown of party affiliation is 31% Democrat, 29% Republican and 38% independent, according to Gallup.”
There are two important angles to this. The first is the flaw in the New York Post’s analysis, which may make Trump feel better, but which is nevertheless mistaken. The second is the re-emergence of poll denialism.
Let’s tackle these one at a time. At first blush, the effort to discredit the results from the Fox News poll may seem compelling: if Gallup says 31% of the electorate is Democratic, while Fox’s poll says it’s 48%, then many might look at the results as weighted and misleading. The trouble is, the New York Post may not have looked closely enough at the Gallup data its analysis cited.
Gallup asked self-identified independents, “As of today, do you lean more to the Democratic Party or the Republican Party?” With these “leaners” added to the mix, the Democratic electorate goes from 31% to 49%.
All of which tells us the sample in the Fox News poll wasn’t especially slanted after all. When Trump asserted yesterday that that poll “turned out to be incorrect,” this was “announced,” and there was a “correction,” he was completely wrong on each point.
But it’s the bigger picture that’s worth keeping in mind in the coming months, because the president is likely to keep trying to discredit survey results that fail to satisfy him.
In April 2018, Trump called into a radio talk show and argued that when it comes to understanding his public support, the responsible thing to do is take his approval rating and then “add another 7 or 8 points to it.” The president said this accounts for those people who like him, but are too embarrassed to admit to pollsters.









