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Americans' Trust in Media Remains at Second Lowest on Record (Gallup, 2023)

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High quality. Established institution or organization with editorial oversight and accountability.

Rating inherited from publication venue: Gallup

Relevant background for AI safety discussions about epistemic ecosystems, the challenge of communicating AI risks to a polarized public, and how low institutional trust complicates governance and public understanding of emerging technologies.

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Importance: 38/100news articlereference

Summary

This Gallup poll reports that American trust in mass media has fallen to the second lowest level ever recorded, with only 32% of Americans saying they trust the media. The data reveals a deepening partisan divide, with Republicans showing historically low trust and independents declining as well. This trend has significant implications for public epistemics and the spread of misinformation.

Key Points

  • Only 32% of Americans say they have 'a great deal' or 'a fair amount' of trust in mass media, second lowest since Gallup began tracking in 1972.
  • Sharp partisan divide: only 11% of Republicans trust media, compared to 58% of Democrats and 29% of independents.
  • Declining media trust compounds challenges around public epistemics, making it harder to establish shared factual baselines.
  • Low institutional trust in media may increase vulnerability to misinformation, AI-generated content, and epistemic manipulation.
  • Trend has worsened progressively since 2016, suggesting structural rather than cyclical erosion of trust.

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Politics

Historically Low Faith in U.S. Institutions Continues

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#### Story Highlights

- No institution’s confidence score improved significantly in the past year
- Confidence in four institutions now at record lows
- Widest party gaps seen for the presidency, public schools

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Americans’ faith in major societal institutions hasn’t improved over the past year following a slump in public confidence in 2022.

Last year, Gallup recorded [significant declines in public confidence](https://news.gallup.com/poll/394283/confidence-institutions-down-average-new-low.aspx) in 11 of the 16 institutions it tracks annually, with the presidency and Supreme Court suffering the most. The share of Americans expressing a great deal or fair amount of confidence in these fell 15 and 11 percentage points, respectively.

Neither score recovered appreciably in the latest poll, with confidence in the court now at 27% and the presidency at 26%. However, the survey was conducted June 1-22, 2023, before the Supreme Court issued decisions affecting affirmative action in education, college loan forgiveness and LGBTQ+ Americans’ access to creative services. Any or all of these decisions could have altered the court’s image as well as that of President Joe Biden, who spoke out against the rulings.



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