President Joe Biden has made the threat that former President Donald Trump poses to democracy a key focus of his presidency, and has hammered it home as a major part of the general election now that Trump is the presumptive GOP nominee. Political strategists have been trying to determine for years how effective that messaging has been — and at first glance, a new poll from Fox News suggests Biden’s push has been working.
The survey found that “the future of American democracy” was the most important issue for respondents in deciding their vote for president, edging the economy out of the top spot for the first time since March. In total, 68% of registered voters said they ranked it as “extremely” important and another 20% deemed it “very” important.
But a look under the hood shows that rather than a rare bipartisan consensus, this instead speaks to how much Trump’s false narrative about 2020 has become gospel for the GOP.
Rather than a rare bipartisan consensus, this instead speaks to how much Trump’s false narrative about 2020 has become gospel for the GOP.
The crosstabs for that question show that a strong majority in every listed demographic ranked democracy’s future as extremely important in deciding their vote. That includes 74% of Democrats as well as 64% of Republicans and 61% of independents. The numbers only get more eyebrow-raising from there, as those who call themselves liberal (73%) and very conservative (75%) sync up, as well as 74% of Biden supporters and 62% of Trump supporters.
If these voters were all on the same page about the threat to democracy, you’d assume that a similar number would see a similar path toward protecting it. But a few questions later, it becomes more clear that the two sides are likely talking past each other. When pollsters asked respondents whom they trust to do a better job on the issue, Biden held a slight lead, 52% to 46%. There is a starkly partisan divide on that front, with 93% of people who voted for Trump in 2020 thinking he’d perform better, versus just 6% who think Biden would. Meanwhile, 4% of Biden 2020 voters said that Trump would fare better at defending democracy, while 94% of those voters believe Biden would safeguard democracy better.
As confusing as it may be at first to think that Trump, the person who worked overtime to overturn the 2020 election’s results and has called every election he’s lost rigged, could be seen as pro-democracy, it does fit with a certain bizarro logic. It’s a belief that logically follows if you incorrectly believe that there was widespread voter fraud in the 2020 election, as 62% of Republicans do, according to a Washington Post survey from January. A poll from Monmouth University last year likewise found that 68% of Republicans still believe that Biden won only because of that supposed fraud, as Trump still falsely claims.
What we’re seeing is the result of MAGA Republicans boosting the big lie of 2020 into a dogma that casts Trump as the defender of democracy. A summit last week hosted by the conservative group Turning Point Action featured a parade of conservative figures lining up to repeat that talking point, Semafor’s Dave Weigel reported. In their telling, people like former White House aides Peter Navarro and Steve Bannon, who were convicted of contempt of Congress for defying subpoenas from the Jan. 6 committee, are political prisoners. The efforts to invoke the 14th Amendment to remove Trump from the ballot were election interference and “January 6 was a ‘fedsurrection’ that Nancy Pelosi could have stopped,” as Weigel put it.








