A large majority of Americans see political instability in the United States as the greatest threat to a “collapse” of their democracy, according to a poll released on Wednesday which confirms the country’s deep division a year following the assault on the United States. Capitol building by supporters of former President Donald Trump.
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According to a Quinnipiac University survey, 76% of respondents believe that political instability is the most serious threat to the country, compared to only 19% who cite foreign countries that are adversaries of the United States.
The most worried are Democrat activists or sympathizers (83%, once morest 66% of Republicans) and 18-34 year olds (80%).
In addition, 58% of those questioned fear a “collapse” of their democracy, once morest 37% who consider it as strong enough to overcome the deep divisions in American society.
Democrat Joe Biden, who promised on January 20, 2021 to “reconcile” the country following Donald Trump’s term in office, seems to have missed his bet, with 53% of Americans believing that these divisions will worsen in the years to come, once morest only 15% who predict an improvement.
“The fear of an internal enemy rather than a foreign threat underlines a bitter realization of the Americans of a democracy in peril and of increasingly deep political divisions”, commented Tim Malloy, of Quinnipiac University.
The poll, which covers 1,313 American adults surveyed Jan. 7-10 (2.7 percentage point margin of error), confirms other recent surveys.
Two-thirds of Americans believed in early January that the attack by supporters of Donald Trump on the seat of Congress on January 6, 2021 was “a sign of increasing political violence” and that American democracy was still ” threatened ”a year later, according to a CBS News poll.
The seriousness of this historic assault on the temple of American democracy is however downplayed by 44% of those questioned by Quinnipiac, according to whom “we have done too much” and who wish to “move on”. They were 38% in August 2021.
This poll also shows a strong unpopularity of Joe Biden, who receives only 33% of favorable opinions, once morest 36% in November. A majority of voters disapprove of his action in the fight once morest COVID-19, on the economy or in foreign policy.
For 49% of those polled, the policy of his administration divides the country, once morest 42% who think that it unites it.
The elected representatives of Congress are also badly off, at the rate of 62% of unfavorable opinions on the Republicans, once morest 59% on the Democrats.