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The survey shows that the Americans divided on American strikes against Iran’s nuclear sites

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The country is, once again, divided according to partisan lines, this time in the United States by joining Israel as military strikes against Iranian nuclear sites, according to a Quinnipiac University survey Libéré Wednesday.

This was the case in Capitol Hill this week while the Democrats of the Congress remained against the “unconstitutionality” of the president Donald Trump Ordering attacks on three nuclear sites in Iran, while most Republican legislators celebrated its bold decision to prevent Iran from obtaining nuclear capacities.

Forty-two percent of voters support the American strikes against Iran, while 51% oppose it, according to the survey of Quinnipiac University, carried out from June 22 to 24 in the days following the American strikes on Fordwow, Natanz and Isfahan in Iran.

The results were divided along the party, with 81% of Republicans supporting strikes, against 75% of the democrats who are opposed to them. Sixty percent of the self -employed opposed the strikes, while 35% supported them.

Most Republicans support the military strike commanded by Trump on the Iranian nuclear program: survey

Trump in Lectern in the White House

President Donald Trump talks about the east room of the White House in Washington on June 21, 2025. (Carlos Barria / Pool via AP)

“No ambivalence of the Republicans on the American bombing of Iranian nuclear sites. By a large margin, the voters of the GOP provide full support for the mission,” said Tim Malloy, analyst of his survey of Quinnipiac University.

The Americans found an increasing appetite for the world leadership of the active United States, led by Maga Republicans: Report

Half of the voters, 50%, think that strikes would make Americans less safe, while 42% said they would make Americans safer.

The results were again divided along the festive lines. Sixty-six percent of the Democrats said that the striking Iran nuclear program would make Americans less safe, while 80% of Republicans said it would make Americans safer.

According to the survey, nearly 8 out of 10 voters are either very worried, 44%, or somewhat worried, 34%, that the United States is trained in the war with Iran. Only 22% of voters are not affected.

Trump in the situation room and an image of damage to the Iranian Ford nuclear site

President Donald Trump in the situation room next to an image of the damage caused to the Ford-Iran nuclear site on June 21, 2025. (The White House; Maxar Technologies via Reuters)

“American voters, most of whom do not support the country to join the Israeli-Iranian conflict, are extremely disturbed by the possibility that the involvement could metastate and attract the United States in a direct war with Iran,” said the Malloy survey.

Forty-two percent of voters think that the United States is too favorable to Israel, while 45% say that support for Israel is roughly right. Only 5% say that the United States is not favorable enough.

The percentage of voters calling the United States too favorable to Israel is at a record level, because the Quinnipiac University asked the question for the first time to the voters registered in January 2017. The percentage of voters calling the United States which does not support is a hollow of all time since then, reveals the survey.

Half of the voters, 50%, support the military strikes of Israel against nuclear and military sites in Iran, while 40% oppose it. Eighty percent of the Republicans support them, while 60% of Democrats do not.

Bomb damage on the Fordow site

This June 24, 2025, the satellite image provided by Maxar Technologies shows damage caused by the bomb to the enrichment installation of Fordwow Fuel’s Fordow. The image reveals craters and destruction during a perimeter installation after the American air strikes targeting Iran’s nuclear infrastructure as part of Operation Midnight Hammer. (Maxar Technologies)

The Quinnipiac University survey included 979 self-identified registered voters in the country who were interviewed from June 22 to 24, with a margin of error of more or less 3.1 percentage points.

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Trump announced that the United States has managed to strike Iranian nuclear sites on Saturday evening. Israel had launched a series of coordinated attacks against Iran the previous week, against which Iran had retaliated, which prompted countries to exchange strikes. After the United States struck Iran, the Islamist country has launched reprisal attacks against an American air base in Qatar.

The president said a cease-fire between Israel and Iran earlier this week, praising a successful mission to hinder Iran’s nuclear sites without engaging in the United States in a Middle East climbing conflict.

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