According to a poll released Wednesday, most U.S. voters are protected against freedom of speech.
In Quinnipiac University survey, 53% of respondents said they were “pessimistic” when it comes to protecting freedom of speech in the United States, while 43% said they were “optimistic” and 3% were uncertain or did not respond. The same poll pointed out that nearly 80% of those surveyed said the United States is in a political crisis.
The findings are due to the controversy’s suspension on ABC’s late night host Jimmy Kimmel and its impact on First Amendment protections. The comedian sparked a fire last week’s comments on President Trump and others’ political rights to the murdered conservative activist Charlie Kirk. Kimmel’s statement attracted reprimand from Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Chairman Brendan Carr.
On Tuesday, Trump turned the ABC down last week and refused to restore it to its original state.
“I can’t believe that ABC’s fake news returned Jimmy Kimmel’s job,” Trump wrote on his Truth Social Platform. “Something has happened until now because his audience disappeared and his ‘talent’ has never been. ”
He added: “Why did they get someone who did so badly, not fun to come back, he puts the network in a strait by playing 99% of active Democratic trash.”
Quinnipiac polls were conducted from September 18 to 21. It included 1,276 respondents with a margin of error of 3.3 percentage points.