In contrast, 77 percent reject the idea of a new candidacy, according to an NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist poll of 1,236 adults from August 29 to September 1.
The results revealed that people living in major cities and suburban women were still two of the groups most opposed to the entrepreneur.
Overall, 61 percent of all respondents said they did not want Trump to run again, a number almost unchanged from the 2020 election when the politician lost the race, the Public Broadcasting Service report added.
Similarly, when respondents were asked if they wanted a new introduction from the Republican, even if they accused him of a crime, the percentage of those who responded negatively increased marginally to 65 percent.
Instead, two-thirds of Republicans wanted a new nomination, and 61 percent of them even defended the position even if he was accused of breaking the law.
The source said it looks like Republicans are starting to turn away from Trump, but since the FBI searched for classified material at his Mar-a-Lago, his Florida home, they’ve regrouped around him.
About this fact, 44% of the people surveyed considered Trump to have done something illegal, and 17% attribute to him unethical behavior, but it is not illegal; Nearly 30 percent said he had done nothing wrong, including 63 percent of Republicans.
Even as Trump offers persistent hints about his 2024 presidential candidacy, they still haven’t materialized.
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