A non-partisan election volunteer observes as memory cards are uploaded from early voting at the Fulton County Election Hub and Operation Center on Nov. 5 in Atlanta.
WASHINGTON โ A majority of Republicans say they are confident in the 2024 vote count after Donald Trumpโs win, according to a new poll that finds a sharp turnaround from GOP votersโ skepticism about U.S. elections after the president-elect spent four years lying about his loss to President Joe Biden.
About 6 in 10 Republicans said they have โa great dealโ or โquite a bitโ of confidence that the votes in last yearโs presidential election were counted correctly nationwide, according to the poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research. Thatโs a sharp increase from about 2 in 10 Republicans who were confident in an AP-NORC poll in October. About two-thirds of Republicans in the new survey said they were confident in their stateโs vote count, up from about 4 in 10 before the election.
That helped drive up the share of Americans saying they have โa great dealโ or โquite a bitโ of confidence in the accuracy of the election to about 6 in 10. Thatโs greater than in October, when roughly half of Americans said they were highly confident the votes would be counted accurately.
The mood is substantially different than it was four years ago, whaen Trumpโs supporters, fueled by his false claims of a stolen election, assaulted police and smashed their way into the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, to interrupt the certification of Bidenโs victory. Weeks later, an AP-NORC poll found about two-thirds of Republicans said Biden was not legitimately elected president.
That belief persisted throughout Bidenโs presidency and until last yearโs election, as Trump continued to sow doubt about the accuracy of U.S. elections. He even did so on Election Day in the hours before it was clear he would win.
Since Trumpโs victory in November, Republicansโ suspicions about election security at all levels โ including confidence in their own local election officials โ ebbed substantially.
There were no indications of trouble before the election despite Trumpโs attempts to lay the groundwork to challenge the accuracy of the count if he lost the vote. Nor were there any real questions over the integrity of the 2020 count, which was confirmed by a wide range of state audits, recounts and reviews, some of which were led by Republicans, including Trumpโs own Department of Justice.
Threats toward local election officials soared after 2020, leading to a wave of veteran administrators leaving office. In a potential sign that those hostilities might ease, the poll found about 7 in 10 Americans have โa great dealโ or โquite a bitโ of confidence that votes in the 2024 presidential election were counted accurately by their local election officials, up from about 6 in 10 in October.
That movement was almost entirely driven by Republicans: About 7 in 10 were highly confident in local officialsโ counts in December, compared with about half in October.
One groupโs confidence in the integrity of the election ticked down โ Democrats. Their confidence in the national vote count declined from about 7 in 10 to about 6 in 10, although their certainty in the accuracy of state vote counts remained stable.
Still, the dip in Democratic confidence is nowhere near the scale of skepticism among Republicans after Trumpโs defeat in 2020. The Democratic candidate, Vice President Kamala Harris, conceded her loss to Trump the day after Election Day and there has been no organized Democratic effort to prevent the handover of the presidency to Trump, as there was among some conservatives in 2020 to try to block Biden from ascending to the presidency.