
Americans twice as likely to disapprove of Trump's handling of Epstein investigation: Survey
The Economist/YouGov poll released Tuesday found 56 percent of respondents 'strongly or somewhat' disapprove of the president's handling of the Epstein investigation, while 22 percent approve.
GOP voters are more likely to approve (45 percent) than disapprove (25 percent) of the president's handling of the Epstein probe, according to the survey, with the remaining 30 percent unsure.
However, the poll found a range of opinions among Republicans based on their age and whether they identify as MAGA.
Republican respondents under age 45 were less likely than older GOP voters to approve of the president's handling of the case — 29 percent approved compared to 56 percent of the older group, according to the survey.
GOP voters who identify as MAGA were also more likely to approve of how the president is dealing with the Epstein investigation (56 percent) than those are do not identify as MAGA (38 percent).
The Epstein case has consumed the GOP-led House, which is set to go on recess a day early to avoid holding a vote on releasing Epstein material. The Trump administration is also laboring to tamp down on the growing controversy.
The vast majority of Americans — including 89 percent of Democrats and 73 percent of Republicans — said the federal government should release all documents it possesses related to the Epstein case, according to the Economist/YouGov survey.
Two-thirds of respondents, including 84 percent of Democrats and 53 percent of Republicans, are of the opinion that the government is covering up evidence about Epstein, who officials say killed himself in 2019 in jail while awaiting trial.
Just nine percent of Americans, including 3 percent of Democrats and 14 percent of GOP voters, do not think the government is covering up evidence, according to the poll.
The survey of 1,729 U.S. adults was conducted July 18-21 with an overall margin of error of approximately 3.5 percent.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Yahoo
15 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Republicans make gains in New Mexico voter registration, including in Santa Fe County
While New Mexico remains solidly blue territory, Republicans continue to make gains in the state's voter registration rolls. The GOP even added more voters in Santa Fe County, one of the most liberal and Democratic-performing areas in the state. Granted, the 5.8% year-over-year increase in registered Republicans in Santa Fe County equates to only about 1,000 voters, but it reflects a statewide trend. The number of registered Republicans across New Mexico grew from 421,653 in July 2024 to 436,647 last month, an increase of nearly 15,000 voters, according to the latest voter registration data. At the same time, Democrats lost just over 11,000 voters. Despite Republicans' gains, the proportion of voters in each major political party remains relatively flat in the state, with Democrats accounting for about 43% of the electorate and Republicans 32% — although, the GOP added a percentage point and Democrats lost one. The increase in Republican voters may reflect a Democratic Party struggling to find its message, Brian Sanderoff, an Albuquerque political analyst and respected pollster, said Monday. "I think the Democratic Party is trying to find its way, especially at the national level, and that can impact voter registration statistics," he added. The Republican Party of New Mexico started the year with the ambitious goal of registering 25,000 new voters, and Sanderoff said it has been doing a good job registering voters at the "grassroots level." The party's executive director, Leticia Muñoz, said everything the party does revolves around voter outreach. "RPNM takes great pride in the work being done by grassroots volunteers to register voters around the state over the last 5 years," she said in a statement. Muñoz also credits the commander in chief. "President [Donald] Trumps' policies continue to benefit New Mexicans greatly, which is another reason we're seeing many voters registering Republican," she said. A spokesperson for the Democratic Party of New Mexico downplayed the increase in registered Republicans. "There is a significantly smaller number of Republicans in New Mexico anyway, so any percentage change will look more dramatic than the reality of the total numbers," Daniel Garcia said in a statement. "I suppose the New Mexico GOP has to spin something to look like good news," he added. "They're obviously in a tough place trying to explain why voters should support quid pro quo immunity deals for child predator Ghislaine Maxwell and the GOP's signature accomplishment — their unpopular 'Big Beautiful Bill' that will close hospitals, eliminate health care coverage, and take away food assistance right here in New Mexico. Not to mention they'll have to explain to voters why they think tariffs, inflation, and privatizing Social Security will make us 'great again.' ' Voter registration data shows a slight increase in independent or "decline-to-state" voters, a number that grew from 315,772 to 320,988. The percentage of unaffiliated voters has been rising over the past decade and a half, a trend that will likely continue after New Mexico adopted a "semi-open primary" system, which allows voters who don't state a party affiliation to cast a ballot in a Democratic or Republican primary without changing their registration. In the state's most populous counties — Bernalillo, Doña Ana and Santa Fe, which are crucial in a statewide race — Democrats have a comfortable edge over Republicans. In those three counties combined, there are 324,152 registered Democrats and 177,070 registered Republicans. Independents are closing in on Republicans, though. The data show 168,351 "decline-to-state" voters in those three counties. Muñoz said Republicans are intent on gaining even more ground. "RPNM will continue our goal to flip New Mexico," she said, adding it's taken six to eight years to flip other blue states red. Asked whether Republicans' gains would affect the governor's race next year, Sanderoff said changes in voter registration are used to measure the direction of the state, but he noted Democrats maintain an advantage. "If you're consistently seeing Republicans make voter registration gains and Democrats stagnating on voter registration statistics, that is a barometer that one looks at to measure the political mood," he said. "It can be a predictor, but it's all relative, and you still have the lopsided voter registration edge that the Democrats have in terms of the actual numbers."
Yahoo
15 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Ex-Kamala Harris Aide Shreds Jesse Watters Using 1 Not-So-'Good' GOP Headline
Mike Nellis, an ex-senior adviser to former Vice President Kamala Harris's 2020 campaign, ripped Fox News host Jesse Watters on Monday after Texas Democrats prevented Republicans in the state's House from advancing a redistricting vote that looks to benefit the GOP in next year's midterm elections. Watters questioned Nellis over whether he thinks it's 'smart for all the headlines' to read that Texas Democrats 'ran away from the job,' a reference to dozens of the party's lawmakers leaving the state to break quorum in an effort to block the GOP-majority House from proceeding with the Trump-backed plan. 'Well, let's take a step back from that for a second,' Nellis replied. 'Do you think it's a good headline for all the headlines to say Republicans are so worried about losing the midterms that they decided to rig the maps?' The GOP-majority House has since issued civil arrest warrants against the Democrats, an effort that legal experts have dismissed as unenforceable outside the Lone Star State. After several seconds of crosstalk, Watters claimed that 'both sides redistrict and it's not the end of the world.' He went on to argue that most Americans don't like lawmakers running 'away from work' like the Democrats in Texas. Nellis hit back, 'Well, most Americans don't like politicians drawing up their own maps. They don't like the fact that Republicans are scared they're going to lose the midterms so they're trying to rig the game like they always do.' He continued, 'Look, Texas Republicans could be, right now, trying to do something to help the American people, help the people with Texas with floods, they're not doing that right now.' Nellis — a Democratic strategist credited as one of the organizers of the 'White Dudes for Harris' group — pointed out that Republicans in Congress are also on recess while the president is playing golf. Related... Texas Dems Prevent Trump-Backed Redistricting Vote Despite Abbott's Threats Beto O'Rourke Says Third Trump Term Is Coming If Texas Democrats Don't Fight Back Texas Democrats Take Extreme Measures To Block Redistricting Vote


New York Times
15 minutes ago
- New York Times
Corrections: Aug. 5, 2025
Because of an editing error, an article on Saturday about the impact of President Trump's shifting tariff levels on the African nation of Lesotho misstated the day Lesotho's 15 percent tariff rate was announced. It was Thursday night, not Friday night. An article on Monday about a city in Kansas suing over a planned ICE detention center misstated the language in a poster seen at a protest of an immigration detention facility in Leavenworth, Kan. The poster said that Leavenworth is 'more than a prison town,' rather than 'not just a prison town.' An article on Friday about Ford Motor announcing that it lost money in the second quarter as tariffs took a toll on its business misstated the day that Ford reported its second-quarter earnings. It was Wednesday, not Tuesday. A picture from the streaming outlet TBPN published with an article on Friday about A.I. researchers' pay packages misidentified a Microsoft employee who used to work at Google's DeepMind lab. The person shown in the image was not Amar Subramanya. An article on Saturday about the negative impact that the Trump administration's tariffs are having on businesses they were meant to help misstated the month that the United States lost 11,000 manufacturing jobs. It was July, not June. The article also misstated the number of manufacturing job losses in June, based on initial estimates. The revised number was 15,000, not 6,000. The earlier estimate was 6,000. An article on Sunday about a veteran lifeguard's Friday routine misstated, in some instances, Javier Rodriguez's surname on second reference and that of his three adult children. Their surname is Rodriguez, not Hernandez. Errors are corrected during the press run whenever possible, so some errors noted here may not have appeared in all editions. To contact the newsroom regarding correction requests, please email nytnews@ To share feedback, please visit Comments on opinion articles may be emailed to letters@ For newspaper delivery questions: 1-800-NYTIMES (1-800-698-4637) or email customercare@