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The Roper Center Reflects On 20 Years Of Polling Since 9/11

September 09, 2021

By Jonathon P. Schuldt
Interim Executive Director, Roper Center for Public Opinion Research
Associate Professor of Communication, Cornell University
 

The terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001, which claimed nearly 3,000 lives, left an indelible mark on American society. As news of the unfolding tragedy spread, pollsters quickly mobilized to survey the public, to capture their reactions in real-time. In the months and years that followed, pollsters have measured opinions on many related issues, from fears about future attacks, to support for retaliatory action in the Middle East, to attitudes about increased security measures.

On this 20th anniversary of 9/11, the Roper Center turns to the data archive to highlight what surveys can tell us about U.S. public opinion toward the attacks, on that fateful day and during the two decades since.   

Emotions in the Immediate Aftermath

On the day of the attacks on the World Trade Center, the Pentagon, and in Pennsylvania, an Ipsos-Reid poll asked 500 U.S. adults about what the events meant for the future. Most felt the world would never be the same. Nearly three-quarters of those polled (74%) said that the events would “fundamentally change things forever,” while only 21% said that “things will return to normal.”  

will things return to normal

 

The public reported overwhelmingly negative feelings in the immediate aftermath. A CBS News/New York Times poll from September 11th to 14th, 2001, asked 2,000 U.S. adults to describe how they felt when they “first heard about the attacks.” Feeling shocked/stunned/numb was the most-common type of response, given by over one-third (35%) of those polled. In total, over 80% reported feeling negatively when they learned of the events—including feeling devasted, horrified, and violated.

feelings upon hearing of the attacks

 

Support for Military Action

How did the attacks shape support for military action? A majority (57%) in the same CBS News/New York Times poll thought the attacks meant that the United States would go to war. Indeed, in addition to the 8-year war in Iraq, the attacks led to the nearly 20-year war in Afghanistan that only recently ended with the withdrawal of U.S. and allied forces from Kabul in August 2021.

While most thought the U.S. would go to war, did they feel that it should? In an October 2001 poll by CNN, Gallup, and USA Today, respondents overwhelmingly supported U.S. military action in Afghanistan, with 82% of those polled in favor and 14% opposed.

should the US go to war over the attacks

 

Nearly 20 years later, however, a war-weary public felt much differently. In an NBC News poll from mid-August 2021—conducted before the deadly suicide bombing at the Kabul airport that killed scores of people, including 13 U.S. service members—only 29% of those polled said that the war in Afghanistan was “worth it,” while 62% said it was not. 

Attitudes Toward Security Measures

The 9/11 attacks led to increased security measures faced in daily life. Consider air travel. Two days after the attacks, on September 13th, 2001, an ABC News/Washington Post poll of 609 U.S. adults found overwhelming public support for new security measures at the nation’s airports: 87% of those polled said they strongly supported new security measures, “even if they cause long delays in air travel.” An additional 11% said they supported the new measures “somewhat,” and only 2% said they were opposed.

do you support new airport security measures

By the 5th anniversary of the attacks—when the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) had become a fixture of American aviation—support for new airport security measures remained high, with 62% supporting “strongly” and 24% supporting “somewhat,” and just 12% expressing any level of opposition.

still support additional airport security

How Americans Have Felt In The Years Since

Over the years, polling suggests that Americans continue to feel strongly about 9/11. In a CBS News poll from June 2019, when asked to name the one national event that made them feel as much pride in the United States since the 1969 moon landing, 17% of those polled named 9/11—second only to the election of Barack Obama as the first Black president (named by 18%) and ahead of the election of Donald Trump as president (named by 9%).

As for whether the public feels the U.S. more safe or less safe than before the 9/11 attacks, the picture is mixed. In a Fox News poll of 1,006 registered voters from August 2017, 47% said the U.S. was safer today and 41% said it was less safe (9% said the same). In a similar Fox News poll conducted one year earlier, however, 39% said the U.S. was safer today and 54% said it was less safe (5% said the same). Because this question asks respondents to compare the time before 9/11 to “today,” it is likely that responses will continue to shift depending on current events and how Americans are feeling about the safety and security of the nation at any given moment.    

Polls, it is often said, provide a snapshot of public opinion in time. The Roper Center is dedicated to preserving these 9/11 survey questions, alongside hundreds of thousands on other topics, for reflecting on the past—today and far into the future.

 

Image Credits:  9-11 Tribute lights, Manhattan New York, by inigocia; 9/11 Memorial park in New York, by Sergii Figurnyi; Blurred Background of Security Checkpoint - Body and Luggage SC by Have a nice day