Multiple national surveys released this week show overwhelming public skepticism about the federal government’s transparency in the Jeffrey Epstein case and broad disapproval of President Donald Trump’s handling of the issue. A CNN/SSRS poll conducted July 10-13 found only 3 percent of Americans satisfied with the information released on Epstein, while half said they were dissatisfied and 29 percent said the amount of information "doesn’t matter." A separate YouGov survey on July 14 reported that 67 percent believe the government is covering up evidence related to Epstein, a view shared across party lines, and 79 percent want all related documents made public. Judgment of the president’s performance is similarly negative. Quinnipiac University polling released July 14 shows voters disapprove of Trump’s handling of the files by 63 percent to 17 percent, with Republicans nearly evenly divided. A Reuters/Ipsos poll taken July 15-16 found 69 percent think the administration is concealing details about Epstein’s alleged clients and, again, only 17 percent approve of Trump’s approach. Despite the bipartisan demand for greater disclosure, the controversy has not dented the president’s standing within his own party. CNN and Quinnipiac tracking surveys indicate Republican approval of Trump has risen modestly to 88–90 percent. The polling flurry follows a Justice Department announcement last week that no “client list” exists and that the federal investigation is closed, a reversal that has intensified calls for transparency across the political spectrum.
Twice as many Trump voters as Harris voters believe the government should not release all Epstein files (YouGov)
📉 Mayoría en EU desaprueba el manejo de Trump sobre el caso Epstein. El 63% considera que no fue transparente en torno a los archivos del magnate. https://t.co/fV8WnE8ELt
Well...turns out Trump is covering up the Epstein files for the REASON YOU WOULD MOST EXPECT. https://t.co/evtP2ecu2d