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Poll: Most Republicans Think a 'Good' President Could Say the N-Word

Charlemagne

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Jul 19, 2017
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https://www.vice.com/en_us/article/wjkam5/poll-most-republicans-think-a-good-president-could-say-the-n-word

Poll: Most Republicans Think a 'Good' President Could Say the N-Word

And 31 percent of them figure Trump "definitely" or "probably" has said the word while in office.

By Eve Peyser

Aug 22 2018, 6:24pm

In the second-worst scandal to hit Donald Trump in the last two weeks, rumors are swirling about a recording of Trump saying the N-word. There's no proof such a recording exists, but disgruntled ex-White House employee Omarosa Manigault Newman released audio of a discussion she had with other Trump staffers about what to do if an N-word tape were to surface, and press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders told reporters, "I can't guarantee anything," when asked if tapes of Trump saying the N-word exist. But even if everyone heard a tape of him saying that, it probably wouldn't bother conservative voters.

That's according to a new Economist/YouGov survey of 1,500 American adults, which found that 64 percent of Republicans said they thought it was "possible that a person who uses the 'N-word' while in office can still be a good President of the United States," compared to 16 percent of Democrats. But even though Republicans are more open to a president who freely spits racial slurs, only 8 percent said they believed Donald Trump "definitely has" used the N-word while in office, compared to 56 percent of Democrats—though 23 percent of Republicans said he "probably has" used the N-word.

To put this all into context, 73 percent of Democrats polled find the N-word offensive, while only 43 percent of Republicans feel the same way.

The poll also asked respondents if they thought previous presidents used the N-word in office, because why not? Republicans were more likely to believe that Democratic presidents like John F. Kennedy and Bill Clinton "probably" used the racial slur—which is interesting considering Republicans are also more likely than Democrats to support a candidate who has used the word. Astoundingly, 34 percent of Republicans polled thought perhaps our softest president, Jimmy Carter, definitely or probably used the N-word during his term in the White House, while only 31 percent thought Trump definitely or probably used the word since becoming president.

Another interesting tidbit from the poll: 13 percent of Republicans think Trump is the best president in history, while 21 percent said Abraham Lincoln, dispelling Trump's repeated assertion that he is more popular among Republicans than "our Honest Abe." One percent of Democrats think Trump is the best president in history, and honestly, if you are one of those Democrats, I have so many questions for you!
 

Bud Plug

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Other fascinating statistics from this poll:

1. 11% of Blacks and 24% of Hispanics thought a good president could use the N-word. If the Republicans could ever capture numbers that high in an election, they would be ecstatic!

2. The highest percentage of affirmative response by region was the West. Those are primarily Blue states.

3. By income brackets, <$50K respondents answered the question in the affirmative 10% less often often than higher income earners. That's not the picture that's painted of the so-called deplorables, who are characterized as low-education, low income types.

In other words, such polls are for amusement purposes only. Anyone who places more stock in them than that hasn't been around the block.
 

essguy_

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Other fascinating statistics from this poll:

1. 11% of Blacks and 24% of Hispanics thought a good president could use the N-word. If the Republicans could ever capture numbers that high in an election, they would be ecstatic!

2. The highest percentage of affirmative response by region was the West. Those are primarily Blue states.

3. By income brackets, <$50K respondents answered the question in the affirmative 10% less often often than higher income earners. That's not the picture that's painted of the so-called deplorables, who are characterized as low-education, low income types.

In other words, such polls are for amusement purposes only. Anyone who places more stock in them than that hasn't been around the block.

Well before you jump to a wrongful conclusion, Bud - you will need to explain what "good" means with regard to a President and how the different demographics may perceive what is "good".

That's why this poll is next to useless.
 

Bud Plug

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Well before you jump to a wrongful conclusion, Bud - you will need to explain what "good" means with regard to a President and how the different demographics may perceive what is "good".

That's why this poll is next to useless.
Aren't we saying the same thing (for once)?
 

omegaphallic

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Mar 26, 2010
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I hate the N word, more then is rational, but if every other thing a hypothetical president did was awesome including benefitting black people, yes that would be a good president who said one rude word that many find offensive. It's not something I would encourage, but saying one stupid thing doesn't counter balance everything else that person has done.

You don't think Lincon ever used the N word and he was the greatest President American President along side Lyndon B Johnson.

That being said Trump is not a good president.
 

oldjones

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Aug 18, 2001
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I hate the N word, more then is rational, but if every other thing a hypothetical president did was awesome including benefitting black people, yes that would be a good president who said one rude word that many find offensive. It's not something I would encourage, but saying one stupid thing doesn't counter balance everything else that person has done.

You don't think Lincon ever used the N word and he was the greatest President American President along side Lyndon B Johnson.

That being said Trump is not a good president.
Quite true. What is interesting in the survey are the other fixed habits of thought that go with — or don't go with — the judgments about that word and those who say it. Whether verbally abusive folks are tolerant of other verbal abusers, and what they assume about others on that matter.
 

Promo

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Here's a link to the full survey. Worth a look, many interesting topics covered: https://d25d2506sfb94s.cloudfront.net/cumulus_uploads/document/iqa9xbuq8j/econTabReport.pdf
BTW, almost no American thinks Trump is a better president than Lincoln - he's still the lowest rated president. lol.

I've been saying this for a year, you can never look at a single survey or performance indicator and draw any meaningful conclusions. You need to:
- look at all indicators relative to each other
- focus on trends rather than point-in-time data
- consider what else may have changed in the environment that could have influenced the data
- read the original question carefully and be aware that people will interpret it differently not only on their demographics, but by their mood at that moment

Most professional pollsters have gotten far better at selecting more accurate sample demographics and polling techniques (telephone, in person, online), but I still find the questions are too open to interpretation.
 
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