Politics

SHOCK POLL: 21% of Trump 2024 Voters Back Impeachment

Trump impeachment – A new Misryoum-reported poll finds 55% of Americans back a House vote to impeach Trump, including 21% of his 2024 voters.

A poll out of Misryoum’s coverage universe is forcing a hard look at loyalty among Trump’s own voters—showing a significant slice now open to impeachment.

When respondents were asked whether they would support the U.S.. House voting to impeach President Donald Trump, 55% said yes and 37% said no, with 8% unsure.. Among Americans who identify with Trump’s coalition. the headline figure is especially striking: 21% of those who voted for Trump in 2024 backed impeachment. while 73% opposed it.

That combination—majority support nationally. and a meaningful minority within Trump’s base—creates a political problem for anyone assuming impeachment is only a partisan Democratic project.. Misryoum analysis: impeachment doesn’t typically move in a vacuum.. It tracks with whether voters believe the presidency has crossed a line serious enough to justify extraordinary action. and whether the costs of supporting that move feel justified compared with the perceived risks of doing nothing.

The poll also shows partisan alignment that’s familiar, but not comforting for Republicans.. Democrats backed impeachment by a wide margin, 88% in favor, while Republicans split sharply, with 72% opposed and 21% supporting.. Independents land in the middle of the map—50% support. 28% oppose—suggesting that impeachment messaging is finding traction beyond hardened party lines.

Misryoum notes that the broader political backdrop likely matters as much as the numbers.. The period described by the survey’s reporting includes erosion in Trump’s standing on multiple issues: immigration enforcement and its impact on approval. poor assessments connected to the Epstein-related files. and sharp drops tied to views of economic conditions.. Add to that the latest media cycle around the president’s public comments related to the Iran war. and you get a climate where critics are asking whether accountability mechanisms should be invoked—and whether they should be invoked now.

One reason impeachment has always been politically potent is that it reframes presidential power as something not only contested at elections. but also adjudicated while in office.. That’s why the question in this poll isn’t about whether respondents approve of Trump’s policies in general.. It is specifically about removing him through a formal institutional process—an action voters typically connect to misconduct. abuse of office. or dangers serious enough to justify unprecedented disruption.

Misryoum’s editorial lens also turns to the House dynamic.. Impeachment votes are not just symbolic; they shape how the majority party governs and how the opposition mobilizes.. If even a one-in-five share of Trump 2024 voters says they would support impeachment in a House vote. that complicates the politics of whip-counting and messaging.. Leaders in either party would have to contend with the possibility that defections are not purely ideological—they can be driven by issue-specific backlash.

The pollster cited by Misryoum coverage characterized the overall support—55%—as unusual by modern impeachment-polling standards.. The comparison to the Watergate-era environment underscores a key point for political watchers: when impeachment support rises unusually high. it often signals that the electorate has shifted from “this is partisan” to “this is a constitutional moment.” In other words. the public mood starts to treat impeachment as a legitimate tool. not a raw political maneuver.

Still, there are limits to what a poll can predict.. Voters may express openness to impeachment while remaining unsure about the downstream outcomes—how a Senate trial would proceed. whether the process would succeed. and what the political fallout would be.. Misryoum would expect those uncertainties to influence turnout and persuasion in ways that pure opinion percentages cannot fully capture.

For now. the most consequential takeaway from Misryoum’s reported poll is the direction of travel: impeachment support appears to be growing not only among Democrats and anti-Trump voters. but inside the orbit of Trump’s own electorate.. If that pattern persists. it could reshape how candidates talk about accountability. how congressional Republicans manage intra-party risk. and how quickly impeachment debates shift from cable news to floor votes.