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Voters see double standard in Trump charges for mishandling classified documents: I&I/TIPP Poll

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Voters See Double Standard In Trump Charges For Mishandling Classified Documents: I&I/TIPP Poll

Special Counsel Robert Hur found that President Joe Biden for decades broke laws by hoarding classified records, but refused to bring charges against him. Yet, former President Donald Trump faces charges for keeping classified items at his Mar-a-Lago home. The I&I/TIPP Poll asked voters: Is this a double standard? Their answer? “Yes.”

To start with, I&I/TIPP asked the poll’s 1,419 respondents whether they were following the Hur investigation “very closely,” “somewhat closely,” “not very closely,” “not at all closely,” and “not sure.”

Only those responding with the first two answers, “very closely” or “somewhat closely,” were counted. That totaled 568 people, or roughly 40% of all those who took the poll.

Voters See Double Standard In Trump Charges For Mishandling Classified Documents: I&I/TIPP Poll

From there, the poll was broken into multiple questions. The first:

“Special Counsel Robert Hur concluded that no charges should be brought against President Biden for mishandling classified documents, citing his well-meaning nature and failing memory. Considering these factors, do you agree or disagree that Hur’s decision not to bring charges against President Biden was lenient?”

Voters See Double Standard In Trump Charges For Mishandling Classified Documents: I&I/TIPP Poll

Among those who were paying close attention to the story, a clear 57% majority said they either agreed strongly (36%) or somewhat (21%) that Biden received lenient treatment. Another 37% said they disagreed somewhat (12%) or strongly (25%). Just 6% said they weren’t sure.

Here’s where it gets interesting. Among Democrats, 69% called Biden’s treatment “lenient,” while 27% disagreed. But only 50% of Republicans agreed, while 46% disagreed. Independents broke 53% agree, 39% disagree.

A follow-up question asked “when comparing the handling of classified document cases, the Department of Justice has been,” followed by three possible responses. “More lenient toward President Biden than to President Trump”; “More lenient toward President Trump than to President Biden;” and, “Not sure.”

Voters See Double Standard In Trump Charges For Mishandling Classified Documents: I&I/TIPP Poll

The majority widened for the second question, with 62% answering that DOJ had been “more lenient” with Biden than with Trump, while only 24% said Trump had been treated with more leniency. Another 14% responded “not sure.”

Across all political parties, there was either a plurality or outright majority saying that DOJ had played favorites in how it charged the two likely candidates for president. For Democrats, it was 47% saying Biden’s treatment was more lenient than Trump’s, while 33% said Trump’s treatment was more lenient.

For Republicans, the same questions elicited 79% saying Biden got more lenient treatment, versus just 16% saying Trump did. Independents came in at 59% Biden and 21% Trump.

In short, Americans focused on Hur’s investigation of Biden’s mishandling of classified documents are mostly convinced that the Department of Justice’s efforts show a clear double standard when applying federal law in this case.

Hur’s investigation of Biden’s mishandling and possibly illegal possession of confidential records came under congressional scrutiny after the committee looking into whether Biden should be impeached subpoenaed the Justice Department for transcripts or audio recordings of Hur’s interviews with Biden.

Despite the subpoena, however, the Justice Department has refused to hand over the requested documents to Congress, missing a March 7 deadline for doing so and setting up a clash of jurisdictions between the legislative and executive branches of the federal government.

“We received a small production from DOJ but not the transcripts or audio that we need and requested,” Russel Dye, the House Judiciary Committee spokesman, told Fox News last week. “Our staff has all necessary clearances to review the contents of the president’s interview, which dealt with materials found in unsecured areas like garages, closets and commercial office space. We are evaluating next steps.”

How do American voters feel? I&I/TIPP asked the following question of voters responding to the poll: “To what extent to you agree or disagree? The transcript of Special Counsel Hur’s interview with President Biden must be released to the public.”

The possible answers included “agree strongly,” “agree somewhat,” “disagree somewhat,” “disagree strongly,” and “not sure.”

The message was clear: 85% said they either agreed “strongly” (57%) or “somewhat” (28%) that the transcripts of Hur’s interview with Biden should be released to the public. Just 9% disagreed either “somewhat” (6%) or “strongly” (3%). Only 6% were “not sure.”

There was strong partisan agreement across the board, showing Dems (78% agree, 14% disagree), Republicans (94% agree, 4% disagree) and independents (83% agree, 10% disagree) all pretty much singing the same tune: Release the transcripts.

Voters See Double Standard In Trump Charges For Mishandling Classified Documents: I&I/TIPP Poll

No doubt, pressure will build to release the transcripts of Biden’s interview in the coming weeks.

Hur is scheduled to go before Congress for further questioning on March 12. He’s likely to get tough questioning from both sides of the aisle, given his description of Biden in his official report as a “sympathetic, well-meaning elderly man with a poor memory,” which angry Democrats claim has damaged Biden’s reelection chances.

Meanwhile, unlike Biden, Trump still faces federal charges for retaining and mishandling classified documents. His attorneys are expected to present arguments on two motions to dismiss the charges at a March 14 hearing in Florida.

Trump’s attorneys will argue that the 1978, post-Watergate era Presidential Records Act allows presidents to hold on to personal records, and that he is immune from prosecution in the case because he was still serving as president when the records were removed.

They will also argue that Trump is being “selectively prosecuted,” a defense that might reverberate given the government refusal to charge Biden for doing basically the same thing, both as a senator for 36 years and as vice president for eight years.

Along with the other major prosecutions against Trump that have been launched over the last two years, the federal charges for mishandling classified documents are serious allegations. But Americans clearly see an imbalance in how Biden and Trump have been treated in this case, which could well have an impact on the outcome of the 2024 election.

I&I/TIPP publishes timely, unique, and informative data each month on topics of public interest. TIPP’s reputation for polling excellence comes from being the most accurate pollster for the past five presidential elections.

Terry Jones is an editor of Issues & Insights. His four decades of journalism experience include serving as national issues editor, economics editor, and editorial page editor for Investor’s Business Daily.

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Our performance in 2020 for accuracy as rated by Washington Post:

Voters See Double Standard In Trump Charges For Mishandling Classified Documents: I&I/TIPP Poll
Source: Washington Post

TIPP Takes

Geopolitics, Geoeconomics, And More

1. Hamas Chief Says Still Open To Gaza Truce Talks As Ramadan Starts – AFP

Hamas chief Ismail Haniyeh said the Palestinian militant group was still open to talks with Israel after mediators so far failed to secure a Ramadan truce in the Gaza war.

Voters See Double Standard In Trump Charges For Mishandling Classified Documents: I&I/TIPP Poll
Hamas chief Ismail Haniyeh

Haniyeh, who is in self-exile in Qatar, said Israel was unwilling to meet Hamas’s conditions for a deal that would have seen hostages held by militants exchanged for Palestinian prisoners in Israel.


2. Israel’s Netanyahu Says Biden ‘Wrong’ In Critique Of Gaza War Policy – Al Arabiya

“If he meant by that that I’m pursuing private policies against the majority, the wish of the majority of Israelis, and that this is hurting the interests of Israel, then he’s wrong on both counts,” Netanyahu said in an interview.

Voters See Double Standard In Trump Charges For Mishandling Classified Documents: I&I/TIPP Poll

The comments came one day after Biden said Netanyahu “must pay more attention to the innocent lives being lost as a consequence of the actions taken” in Gaza. Biden had also said that Israel’s approach to the war was “hurting Israel more than helping Israel.”


3. Ship Carrying 200 Tonnes Of Essential Food Supplies To Gaza Stuck In Cyprus Due To ‘Technical Issues’ – WION

According to The Guardian, the World Central Kitchen (WCK), along with the Spanish charity Open Arms, coordinated the delivery of rice, flour, lentils, beans, canned fish, and meat via an Open Arms vessel from Larnaca to Gaza.

Voters See Double Standard In Trump Charges For Mishandling Classified Documents: I&I/TIPP Poll

Cyprus government spokesperson Konstantinos Letymbiotis said that Cypriot officials had inspected the cargo under an Israel-approved plan. However, reports indicate that “technical issues” might postpone its departure until Monday morning.


4. Ukrainian Troops Jittery As Russia Starts Using Powerful, Gliding Bombs On Frontlines – WION

Russia has reportedly started using a powerful aerial bomb on the frontlines in the Ukraine war, which is devastating enemy defenses.

Voters See Double Standard In Trump Charges For Mishandling Classified Documents: I&I/TIPP Poll

Russian forces converted a basic Soviet-era weapon into a gliding bomb so powerful that it could cause a crater 15 meters wide. The bomb, FAB-1500, is a 1.5-tonne weapon mounted over fighter jets and dropped from a high altitude, from at least 60-70 km away from the area of impact.


5. Putin Set For Election Coronation In Vote With No Opposition – AFP

Vladimir Putin is set to secure another six-year term as Russian leader this weekend in a vote the Kremlin says will show society is fully behind his assault on Ukraine.

Voters See Double Standard In Trump Charges For Mishandling Classified Documents: I&I/TIPP Poll

Victory in the March 15-17 contest will allow him to stay in the Kremlin until at least 2030, longer than any Russian leader since Catherine the Great in the eighteenth century. Though Putin is blasted as a pariah in the West, the Kremlin says the vote will show that Russians at home are unified behind him and his offensive.


6. Will Never Surrender To Russia, Says Kyiv While Slamming Pope’s Call For Negotiation – Reuters

Ukraine rebuffed Pope Francis’s call to negotiate with Russia. President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said the pontiff was engaging in “virtual mediation,” and his foreign minister said Kyiv would never capitulate.

Voters See Double Standard In Trump Charges For Mishandling Classified Documents: I&I/TIPP Poll

Pope Francis said that when things went badly for a party to a conflict, they had to show the “courage of the white flag” and negotiate.


7. France’s Macron Postpones Trip To Ukraine, Third Time Since February – Reuters

The latest postponement comes just days after a Russian missile missed Ukraine’s president and the prime minister of Greece by hundreds of yards when it slammed into port infrastructure in the Black Sea city of Odesa. 

Voters See Double Standard In Trump Charges For Mishandling Classified Documents: I&I/TIPP Poll

Macron had also been due to visit Odesa. Diplomatic sources said the French presidency was considering whether to broaden Macron’s trip to Ukraine to include other Western heads of state rather than a simple bilateral trip in an effort to show unity among allies and solidarity with Ukraine.


China is considering offering legal protection to employees forced to stay online even after work hours, reported Hong-Kong-based news outlet South China Morning Post (SCMP).

Voters See Double Standard In Trump Charges For Mishandling Classified Documents: I&I/TIPP Poll

This comes after Lyu Guoquan, head of the general office of China’s trade union federation, recommended last week to the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC) that guidelines and a legal framework be created for “working overtime online.” According to Lyu, the proposal was accepted by several government agencies and political advisory bodies.


9. Singapore Steps Up Scrutiny Of China Wealth After Money Laundering Case – Nikkei Asia

Following a recent money laundering scandal, Singapore has stepped up scrutiny of Chinese wealth coming into the city, including rejecting applications to set up family offices.

Voters See Double Standard In Trump Charges For Mishandling Classified Documents: I&I/TIPP Poll

According to two sources working on the cases, the Monetary Authority of Singapore has denied two family office applications with Chinese-affiliated wealth since January. These include people who hold only a Chinese passport and those who hold additional foreign passports.


10. North Korean Missiles Developed With Foreign Help – Nikkei Asia

North Korea is strongly suspected of using joint research with other countries to develop missile and other military technologies, a Nikkei investigation has found.

Voters See Double Standard In Trump Charges For Mishandling Classified Documents: I&I/TIPP Poll

An analysis of papers co-authored by North Korean and foreign researchers through Scopus –  a multidisciplinary publishing database – has found indications in at least 110 research papers that U.N. sanctions may have been violated. North Korean and Chinese researchers co-authored more than 80% of these papers.


11. U.S. Reportedly Airlifts Embassy Staff Out Of Haiti As Gangs Besiege Political Area – The Guardian

The U.S. has reportedly started airlifting embassy staff out of Haiti under the cover of darkness after dozens of heavily armed gang fighters tried to seize the political quarter of its capital, Port-au-Prince.

Voters See Double Standard In Trump Charges For Mishandling Classified Documents: I&I/TIPP Poll

Haiti’s gangs began an offensive to topple the government on 29 February, storming and ransacking police stations, prisons, and hospitals and laying siege to strategic locations, including the port and airport.


12. India Signs $100bn Free Trade Deal With Four European Nations – BBC

India has signed a free trade agreement (FTA) with a group of four European countries that are not members of the European Union. The EFTA is made up of Norway, Switzerland, Iceland and Liechtenstein.

Voters See Double Standard In Trump Charges For Mishandling Classified Documents: I&I/TIPP Poll
Indian PM Narendra Modi

The agreement comes after almost 16 years of negotiations. Under this deal, India will lift most import tariffs on industrial goods from the four countries in return for investments over 15 years. The investments are expected across various industries, including pharmaceuticals, machinery, and manufacturing.


13. Europe At Risk Of “Catastrophic” Consequences From Climate Change: EU – AFP

Europe could suffer “catastrophic” consequences from climate change if it fails to take urgent and decisive action to adapt to risks, the European Environment Agency (EEA) said in its first report on the continent’s climate risks.

Voters See Double Standard In Trump Charges For Mishandling Classified Documents: I&I/TIPP Poll

Areas in southern Europe are most at risk. The dangers include fires, water shortages, and their effects on agricultural production, while low-lying coastal regions face flooding, erosion, and saltwater intrusion threats.


14. Afghanistan: ISIS Is Back And Threatens To Be Deadlier Than Ever – The Daily Beast

As well as cruelty and misogyny, Taliban rule in Afghanistan has also brought a resurgence in the threat from ISIS. 

Voters See Double Standard In Trump Charges For Mishandling Classified Documents: I&I/TIPP Poll

The Sunni Muslim terror group has been allowed to re-group and re-tool in Afghanistan, where thousands of fighters are training and plotting attacks, despite Taliban claims that they are trying to clamp down on them.


15. Saudi Oil Giant Aramco’s Profits Dip After Record 2022 – D.W.

The world’s largest oil exporter reported a 2023 profit of $121.25 billion in a stock market filing. This is a reduction of almost 25% compared to 2022, when Russia’s invasion of Ukraine drove up oil prices.

Voters See Double Standard In Trump Charges For Mishandling Classified Documents: I&I/TIPP Poll

Aramco’s record 2022 profits gave Saudi Arabia its first budget surplus in years. Profits from the kingdom’s vast natural reserves are crucial to Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s projects, which seek to pivot away from oil sales. These include major construction projects like his futuristic desert city, Neom.


16. Fresh Health Warning Over A Lack Of Sleep As Study Finds Getting Fewer Than Six Hours Each Night May Raise The Risk Of Type 2 Diabetes – Daily Mail

Not getting enough sleep may lead to type 2 diabetes, a study has suggested.

Voters See Double Standard In Trump Charges For Mishandling Classified Documents: I&I/TIPP Poll

Managing less than six hours each night was linked to a 16 percent higher risk of developing the condition. And the odds remained elevated even when people ate healthily, suggesting that eating well cannot compensate for sleep deprivation.


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Republished with permission from TIPP Insights

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