• enkers
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    3 months ago

    I think either you’re misunderstanding the data, or I am, because it does indeed seem to be 24% of Republicans according to the source:

    Most Americans (81%) disagree with the statement, “if Donald Trump is not confirmed as the winner of the 2024 election, he should declare the results invalid and do whatever it takes to assume his rightful place as president,” compared with 14% who agree.

    Around one-quarter of Republicans (24%) agree with the statement, compared with 13% of independents and only 5% of Democrats who say the same. Republicans who hold a favorable view of Trump are more likely to agree than Republicans who hold an unfavorable view of him (29% vs. 6%).

    If the 24% was the portion of Republicans out of the 14% who agreed, who would the other 76% be?

    • jordanlund@lemmy.worldM
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      3 months ago

      You might be right, I was thinking that 24% of Republicans HAD to be larger than 14% overall, but breaking it down:

      Republicans in 2020 were 74,223,975 votes out of 158,429,631 cast. 46.8% of all votes cast.

      If 24% of them want to turn the election to Trump, regardless of who wins, that would be 17,813,754 votes or 11% of votes overall.

      • enkers
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        3 months ago

        That’s honestly an excellent sanity check on the poll. I did take a brief look at the methodology table, and there were some interesting numbers in there:

        [Polled respondent reported political affiliation:]

        Republican: 1603
        Independent: 1544
        Democrat: 1720
        Other/Don’t know: 485

        As an outside observer, whenever I’ve watched US elections, it’s never been obvious that there have been that many independent voters. It did make me wonder if these are mostly strategic voters who shift their allegiance on election day, or if the MSM simply never accurately conveys just how many independent voters there are.

        • nilloc@discuss.tchncs.de
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          3 months ago

          Wheee I live independent is actually undeclared. During a primary vote, you have to declare which ballot you’ll be voting on and then afterward, visit a table to have your undeclared status restored.

          During a regular election everyone gets the same ballot and no declarations take place. Your just vote for whomever you want.