- A new
Quinnipiac poll finds that Democrats are more averse to pro-Putin comments than Republicans. - 81% of Democrats view politicians and media figures who make such comments less favorably.
A Quinnipiac University poll released Wednesday revealed a significant difference in how members of each political party view politicians and media figures who make comments supportive of Russian President
According to the poll, 81% of Democrats say that they view politicians and media figures who've made pro-Putin comments in the last several weeks less favorably, while 16% said it didn't affect their opinion.
But while 54% of self-identified independents said the same, just 45% of Republicans agreed. A slight plurality of Republicans, 46%, said that such comments don't affect their opinions of the public figures making them.
A minuscule percentage of voters — 3% of Republicans, 2% of Democrats, and 1% of independents — say that such comments make them view politicians and media figures more favorably.
More broadly, the poll found strong support among the American public for supporting Ukrainians amid the Russian invasion of their country, with 75% of Americans declaring that the US should do whatever it can to support
The polling comes weeks after
Fox
And last week, far-right Rep. Madison Cawthorn of North Carolina called Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy a "thug" and said the Ukrainian government was "extremely corrupt" and "extremely evil."
But despite Republican voters' relative indifference when it comes to
And some Republicans are pushing back on those who've praised Putin. Former Vice President Mike Pence recently declared in a speech to Republican donors that there's "no room" in the party for "apologists for Putin," implicitly criticizing his former running mate.
Republican senators, meanwhile, condemned Rep. Cawthorn as an outlier when asked by Insider about his remarks at a press conference last week.
The poll was conducted from March 10 to March 14, 2022, by mobile phones and landlines. "Responses are reported for 1,936 adults with a margin of sampling error of +/- 2.2 percentage points," according to Quinnipiac. "The survey includes 1,754 self-identified registered voters with a margin of sampling error of +/- 2.3 percentage points."