USA TODAY
Most Americans are braced for violence at President-elect Joe Biden s inauguration Wednesday, a new USA TODAY/Suffolk Poll finds, amid an overwhelming consensus that the nation s democracy has been weakened since the last president was sworn in four years ago.
The survey finds an anxious and embattled electorate, the divisions from the November election still raw. Two-thirds say the country is headed in the wrong direction, a double-digit jump since last month. It should be a happy time . but I am very nervous and frightened, says Sandi Bethune, 71, a Democratic retiree from Oakland, California, who voted for Biden.
Exclusive: As Trump leaves office, 50% of Americans say he ll be seen as failed president Susan Page and Sarah Elbeshbishi, USA TODAY
President Donald Trump spending last presidential Christmas at Mar-a-Lago
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President Donald Trump leaves the White House next month with the country more sharply divided than when he moved in and amid caustic assessments of his record in office, a new USA TODAY/Suffolk University Poll finds.
Fifty percent of Americans now predict history will judge him as a failed president.
The survey, taken in the waning weeks of his administration, shows the risks of actions he is contemplating on his way out the door. Americans overwhelmingly say issuing a preemptive pardon for himself would be an abuse of presidential power, and an even bigger majority, including most Republicans, say he should attend President-elect Joe Biden s inauguration to demonstrate the peaceful transfer of power.
USA TODAY
President Donald Trump leaves the White House next month with the country more sharply divided than when he moved in and amid caustic assessments of his record in office, a new USA TODAY/Suffolk University Poll finds.
Fifty percent of Americans now predict history will judge him as a failed president.
The survey, taken in the waning weeks of his administration, shows the risks of actions he is contemplating on his way out the door. Americans overwhelmingly say issuing a preemptive pardon for himself would be an abuse of presidential power, and an even bigger majority, including most Republicans, say he should attend President-elect Joe Biden s inauguration to demonstrate the peaceful transfer of power.
Exclusive: As Trump leaves office, 50% of Americans say he ll be seen as failed president Susan Page and Sarah Elbeshbishi, USA TODAY
President Donald Trump spending last presidential Christmas at Mar-a-Lago
Replay Video UP NEXT
President Donald Trump leaves the White House next month with the country more sharply divided than when he moved in and amid caustic assessments of his record in office, a new USA TODAY/Suffolk University Poll finds.
Fifty percent of Americans now predict history will judge him as a failed president.
The survey, taken in the waning weeks of his administration, shows the risks of actions he is contemplating on his way out the door. Americans overwhelmingly say issuing a preemptive pardon for himself would be an abuse of presidential power, and an even bigger majority, including most Republicans, say he should attend President-elect Joe Biden s inauguration to demonstrate the peaceful transfer of power.