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Home Research Topics Politics & Policy U.S. Elections & Voters Election 2020
Pew Research CenterDecember 15, 2020
1. Partisans disagree on post-election messages from Biden and Trump, attention to voter fraud charges

Partisans largely approve of their party’s candidate’s message after the election, although about one-third of Republicans say Trump’s has been wrong

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Partisans largely approve of their party’s candidate’s message after the election, although about one-third of Republicans say Trump’s has been wrong

Post Infographics

1. Partisans disagree on post-election messages from Biden and Trump, attention to voter fraud charges
Similar shares of Democrats and Republicans have been following Trump’s public statements since the election; Republicans paying less attention to Biden’s
Partisans largely approve of their party’s candidate’s message after the election, although about one-third of Republicans say Trump’s has been wrong
Among Republicans, those who are younger, have college degrees more likely to say Trump is sending wrong message post-election
Among Republicans, media diet linked with substantial differences in views of Trump’s message
Partisan divide on amount of attention given to voter fraud allegations, agreement on attention to Trump not conceding
Half of U.S. adults know that not conceding after election would be unprecedented in modern history

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