Few Americans see Trump administration delivering justice in Epstein cases, Reuters/Ipsos poll finds
The poll found deep bipartisan distrust, with 84% saying the Epstein files show powerful people are rarely held accountable.
- A new Reuters/Ipsos poll released Wednesday shows 75% of Americans suspect the federal government is hiding information about Jeffrey Epstein's clients, with only 10% believing the Trump administration has helped hold associates accountable.
- Deep public distrust persists across party lines, with 84% of Americans saying files suggest powerful individuals are rarely held to account, reflecting widespread skepticism of the Trump administration's handling of the probe.
- Microsoft Co-Founder Bill Gates testified before the House Oversight Committee on Wednesday regarding his past associations with Epstein, having previously called the relationship a "huge mistake."
- No criminal charges have been brought against any individuals named in the materials, though corporate executives have stepped down this year after appearing in the files, as congressional investigators continue probing the case.
- The Justice Department released documents earlier this year following legislative pressure from Congress, yet victims continue to argue that the full scope of the network has yet to be fully exposed.
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7 Articles
Few Americans see Trump administration delivering justice in Epstein cases, Reuters/Ipsos poll finds
Just 10% of respondents in a Reuters/Ipsos poll said the Trump administration had helped efforts to hold people connected to Jeffrey Epstein accountable.
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 43% of the sources are Center
Factuality
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