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How a lot will the Epstein saga harm Trump?


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Survey Says is a weekly collection rounding up crucial polling traits or information factors you must learn about, plus a vibe verify on a development that’s driving politics.


It was a bombshell assertion from Legal professional Basic Pam Bondi. In early Could, she informed reporters the FBI was reviewing “tens of hundreds of movies” of convicted intercourse offender Jeffrey Epstein “with kids or baby porn.”

The remark ignited a firestorm. For years, Trump-aligned conspiracy theorists believed he held the important thing to exposing Epstein’s alleged sex-trafficking community and long-rumored “shopper record,” which Trump promised to launch if he gained final 12 months’s election. And Bondi’s remarks raised expectations that damning new proof was imminent.

Attorney General Pam Bondi speaks to the media, Friday, June 27, 2025, in the briefing room of the White House in Washington. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)
Legal professional Basic Pam Bondi speaks to the media on June 27 within the briefing room of the White Home.

However now she is strolling all of it again. The Justice Division, which she leads, launched a memo saying there was no shopper record, which she publicly claimed in February to have “sitting on my desk proper now to assessment.” And simply as abruptly, Trump informed his supporters to cease speaking about Epstein altogether, calling the problem “a hoax.” That abrupt pivot surprised many MAGA loyalists who had constructed total narratives round Trump being the one to blow the Epstein case vast open.

Now Trump is making an attempt to recalibrate. Whereas he’s not recommending a particular prosecutor within the Epstein case, he reluctantly inspired Bondi on Wednesday to launch any “credible” info relating to it. It’s unclear whether or not that olive department will fulfill his base or pour gasoline on the fireplace, although. Even some GOP lawmakers, like Home Speaker Mike Johnson, are signaling they need extra transparency.

And new polling signifies the general public feels the identical. A CNN/SSRS survey, performed July 10-13, finds that solely 3% of People are happy with the data launched in regards to the Epstein case. Fifty p.c are dissatisfied, together with 56% of Democrats and 40% of Republicans.



The dissatisfaction is strongest on the ideological extremes. The ballot exhibits that very conservative Republicans and extra liberal Democrats are essentially the most sad with the lack of expertise. Amongst Republicans, 48% of the very conservative group are dissatisfied, in contrast with 40% of those that are solely considerably conservative. On the Democratic aspect, 70% of liberals need extra info, in contrast with 52% of moderates and conservative Democrats. 

A separate survey by The Economist/YouGov, performed July 11-14, finds comparable frustrations. Almost 4 in 5 People need the federal government to launch all Epstein-related paperwork, together with 85% of Democrats and 75% of Republicans.

Quinnipiac College’s new ballot exhibits that simply 17% of voters approve of how the Trump administration is dealing with the Epstein recordsdata, whereas 63% disapprove. And Republicans are almost cut up on the problem.



This narrative isn’t simply background noise, although. It exhibits a deeper breakdown in how People are viewing the Epstein scandal. Each Republicans and Democrats are upset, however the political fallout might run deeper on the proper. Trump informed his base to maneuver on. Some are listening—however others aren’t.

YouGov information reveals that Republicans’ confidence within the Epstein investigation has plummeted since January—a shocking change provided that Trump’s administration now oversees it. In early January, 36% of Republicans believed that “all individuals related with Jeffrey Epstein who’re alleged to have dedicated intercourse crimes might be totally investigated,” per the ballot’s wording. However as of early July, that quantity is now simply 19%.

Jack Posobiec hold up a binder with a cover titled "The Epstein Files: Phase 1" at the White House, Thursday, Feb. 27, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)
A right-wing influencer holds up a binder with a canopy titled “The Epstein Information: Section 1” on the White Home on Feb. 27. Nonetheless, almost not one of the info contained therein was new.

“Prime Trump officers have spent years selling baseless conspiracy theories about Epstein, and now that they’re in cost, the strain is on for them to provide,” stated Matthew Dallek, a historical past professor at George Washington College who focuses on the conservative motion. “Trump was supposed to come back in and expose [Epstein], and I believe the invoice is coming due for that savior narrative. They need to ship on that promise.”

YouGov’s information additionally exhibits that Democrats’ confidence within the investigation dropped from 41% in January to 16% in July. However Dallek believes Democratic frustration could also be extra political than principled. If Democratic voters need extra info, it’s actually because they think Trump may very well be implicated. A July 9 ballot from YouGov finds that 69% of Democrats imagine Trump was concerned in Epstein’s alleged crimes. Simply 7% of Republicans maintain the identical view.

This partisan hole provides Democrats a strategic alternative. 

“The truth that Democrats are making a problem of it might counsel they need to fan the flames and exploit the rift inside MAGA, so it’s fairly opportunistic,” Dallek stated. “However simply because it’s shameless doesn’t imply it can fail. It may very well be shameless and efficient on the similar time.”

This seems to be taking place. Axios just lately reported that Home Minority Chief Hakeem Jeffries shocked some colleagues by absolutely supporting efforts to use GOP divisions over Epstein. And Democrats have proposed measures to power the DOJ to launch paperwork, however Republicans have blocked them.

There has lengthy been excessive public curiosity within the case. In July 2019, after Epstein’s arrest on fees of kid intercourse trafficking however earlier than his loss of life, The Economist/YouGov discovered that 37% of adults had heard “quite a bit” in regards to the case. 

FILE - Jeffrey Epstein appears in court in West Palm Beach, Fla., July 30, 2008. Deutsche Bank has agreed to pay $75 million to settle a lawsuit, Thursday, May 18, 2023, claiming that the German lender should have seen evidence of sex trafficking by Jeffrey Epstein when he was a client, according to lawyers for women who say they were abused by the late financier.  (Uma Sanghvi/The Palm Beach Post via AP, File)
Jeffrey Epstein seems in court docket in West Palm Seaside, Florida, in July 2008.

In January 2024, YouGov discovered that 37% believed Epstein was murdered, in contrast with 20% who thought he died by suicide, which is Epstein’s official explanation for loss of life. And these numbers have shifted solely barely since then: As of this month, 39% suppose Epstein was murdered, and 20% imagine he took his personal life.

Whereas many points might harm Republicans heading into the 2026 midterm elections, it’s unclear whether or not Epstein might be one. Dallek warned that even when some MAGA voters develop into disillusioned with Trump’s failure to “ship” on Epstein, it won’t outweigh considerations over inflation or immigration.

“Folks have been saying Trump would lose his base or key supporters for 10 years,” Dallek stated. “I don’t suppose Epstein would be the high concern on Election Day, however it might have an impact.”

Both manner, the Epstein saga reveals a deeper drawback for Trump: His base anticipated a reckoning, however as a substitute, they’re getting scraps.

If Trump can’t—or gained’t—observe by means of, even loyal supporters would possibly begin to tune out. For a motion nominally constructed on exposing the corrupt elite, failing to ship on the most important conspiracy may very well be the last word backfire.

Any updates?

  • Trump is threatening to revoke U.S. citizenship from political enemies, together with actor Rosie O’Donnell, a longtime Trump critic who was born in New York. However voters aren’t on board. A brand new YouGov ballot finds that 72% of U.S. adults—together with 46% of Republicans—don’t suppose presidents ought to have the facility to strip citizenship from individuals born right here. 

  • A brand new Echelon Insights ballot confirms what many suspected about Musk’s so-called America Get together: It’s useless on arrival. When requested who they’d assist in a hypothetical congressional race, doubtless voters overwhelmingly favored the 2 main events—45% for Democrats, 41% for Republicans. Simply 5% stated they’d vote for a candidate from Musk’s political occasion. Worse, 39% stated they wouldn’t contemplate supporting an America Get together candidate, whereas solely 32% stated they might. 

  • Most People don’t assist dismantling the Division of Schooling, regardless of efforts from the Trump administration to do exactly that. Their push gained momentum this week after the Supreme Court docket dominated the president can proceed with firing almost 1,400 division officers. However 57% of People say eliminating the company would harm public colleges of their neighborhood, whereas 7% suppose it will haven’t any affect, in keeping with YouGov. In some way, although, 31% of Republicans say shutting it down would assist their native colleges “quite a bit.” Go determine.

  • Trump’s aggressive deportation push isn’t simply floundering—it’s costing him assist. A brand new Reuters/Ipsos ballot exhibits his approval score on immigration has dropped to 41%, the bottom since he took workplace in January. Simply 28% of People agree that “immigration arrests at locations of labor are good for the nation,” whereas 54% disagree. Even Republicans are cut up: 56% assist office raids, 24% oppose them, and 20% are uncertain.

  • We already knew a lot of Trump’s insurance policies had been unpopular—however new information exhibits simply how a lot ache these insurance policies are inflicting. Forty-nine p.c of People say Trump’s insurance policies have harm them, in keeping with a new ballot from the Related Press-NORC Middle for Public Affairs Analysis. Simply 27% say the insurance policies have helped, whereas one other 22% report no affect. Worse for Trump, his approval numbers throughout most main points stay underwater, together with his best-performing concern—immigration—topping out at simply 43% approval. He scores lowest on well being care, the place simply 34% approve of his dealing with of that concern. That dismal rating is probably going tied to his sweeping financial legislation, which slashes Medicaid to assist fund tax cuts for the rich—a transfer that’s left many People worse off.

Vibe verify

As of Friday at 12:03 PM ET, 43.9% of the general public permitted of Trump, whereas 52.6% disapproved, for a web approval score of -8.7 factors, in keeping with election analyst Nate Silver’s polling common.



About two weeks earlier, Trump’s approval stood barely larger, at 44.9%, with 51.4% disapproving.

Andrew Mangan contributed analysis.