Stand up for the facts!

Our only agenda is to publish the truth so you can be an informed participant in democracy.
We need your help.

More Info

I would like to contribute

$
William Weld
William Weld
stated on September 7, 2016 an Ask Me Anything session on reddit:

Says “76 percent of all voters in the United States say they want Johnson-Weld, by name, in the presidential debates.”

Half-True
By Louis Jacobson
September 13, 2016

William Weld says 76% of Americans want Gary Johnson in debates

The nonpartisan Commission on Presidential Debates has a rule about how third-party candidates can make it into the fall debates: They need to reach an average of at least 15 percent support in five preselected national polls.

No third-party candidate is on track to meet that requirement yet, but the Libertarian Party ticket of Gary Johnson and William Weld thinks it has a shot, and they’re putting on a big push to make participation in the debates a reality.

As part of their effort, Weld recently sought to harness the support of voters who may not be confirmed backers of their ticket but who do at least want to see third-party candidates on the debate stage.

“The mission of the Commission on Debates is to educate people about the presidential election,” Weld wrote recently during a Reddit Ask Me Anything session he participated in with Johnson. “76 percent of all voters in the United States say they want Johnson-Weld, by name, in the presidential debates. End of argument.”

Weld later made the same point in a CNN interview with host Michael Smerconish on Sept. 10, saying, “It’s very easy to say we should be included in the debates when 76 percent of the people in the United States say they want us in the debates.”

It turns out that Weld has a point, but he misstated some key details. The Johnson-Weld campaign did not reply to an inquiry for this article.

The 76 percent figure comes from a Suffolk University poll conducted for USA Today and released Sept. 1. Here’s the relevant question:

Google Docs Image

So Weld was on to something. However, it’s worth noting a few pieces of missing context.

First, Weld said that voters in the poll wanted the ticket “by name,” but that’s not correct. The question asked, “If a third-party candidate is certified by a majority of state ballots, should he or she be included in the debates this fall?”

Second, Weld said, “76 percent of all voters in the United States.” In reality, the poll didn’t sample “all voters” — or even all registered voters. It sampled 1,000 likely voters. Pollsters, especially as Election Day draws near, sometimes use methods, such as respondents’ past voting histories, to filter out the voters who are “likely” to vote.

So Weld’s description of the Suffolk poll data overstates the case a bit.

And there’s another issue: We found two other polls that specifically mentioned either Johnson-Weld or Johnson alone, and their figures were lower than the one Suffolk found.

One is a poll by the web publication Morning Consult that surveyed 2,002 registered voters.

It asked, “Should Gary Johnson be included in the presidential debates?” The poll found that 52 percent said yes, 22 percent said no and 26 percent didn’t know or had no opinion. (The same poll asked a similar question of Green Party candidate Jill Stein and found 47 percent support for her inclusion in the debates.)

Google Docs Image

The other poll was of 1,498 likely voters by Quinnipiac University on August 25.

It asked, “Do you think that Gary Johnson, the Libertarian candidate for president, should be included in the presidential debates this year, or not?” This poll found that 62 percent said yes, 29 percent said no and 9 percent didn’t know or didn’t answer.

So the other two polls that did mention Johnson by name found lower percentages of support for Johnson’s participation in the debates, though both still found majority support.

David Paleologos, the director of the Suffolk poll, generally agreed that Weld’s statement left out some important information.

“The question was directed to the process of being certified on a majority of state ballots rather than introducing names,” he said.

He added, though, that the campaign might have some grounds to argue that the poll implicitly refers to them since they are currently the only campaign that will be on all 50 state ballots.

Our ruling

Weld said that “76 percent of all voters in the United States say they want Johnson-Weld, by name, in the presidential debates.”

Weld can point to recent a poll with that 76 percent figure, but his description of what it means isn’t entirely correct. It’s a poll of likely voters, not “all voters in the United States,” and the question didn’t mention Johnson or Weld “by name.” However, a majority of voters do support Johnson’s inclusion in the debates — a finding that holds in three recent polls on this question 

Weld’s talking point is onto something, but his phrasing misses nuance and overstates the case. So we rate the statement Half True.

Our Sources

William Weld, comment in Reddit Ask Me Anything session, Sept. 7, 2016

William Weld, comments on CNN, Sept. 10, 2016

Commission on Presidential Debates, "The Commission on Presidential Debates: An Overview," accessed Sept. 12, 2016

Suffolk University poll, methodology, accessed Sept. 12, 2016

Quinnipiac University, national poll, Aug. 25, 2016

Morning Consult, "Voters Want Gary Johnson, Jill Stein on the Debate Stage," Sept. 1, 2016

USA Today, "Poll: Fear, not excitement, driving Clinton and Trump supporters," Sept. 1, 2016

Email interview with Karlyn Bowman, polling analyst at the American Enterprise Institute, Sept. 12, 2016

Email interview with David Paleologos, director of the Suffolk University poll, Sept. 12, 2016

 

Browse the Truth-O-Meter

More by Louis Jacobson
Donald Trump
stated on May 4, 2026 a White House event:
“Consumer confidence is way up."
False
Donald Trump
stated on April 23, 2026 remarks at the White House:
“We are right now producing more oil than Saudi Arabia and Russia combined.”
Mostly True
Chris Wright
stated on April 19, 2026 an interview on CNN's "State of the Union":
Solar and wind have not reached “3% of global energy.”
Half-True
Donald Trump
stated on April 15, 2026 an interview with Fox Business News:
“Thom Tillis is no longer a senator.”
False
Byron Donalds
stated on April 12, 2026 an interview on NBC's "Meet the Press":
The U.S. Navy was created "to free international waters from the Barbary pirates."
Mostly True
Seth Moulton
stated on March 24, 2026 an interview on MS NOW:
"Bombing civilian power infrastructure is a war crime.”
Mostly True
Donald Trump
stated on March 29, 2026 remarks aboard Air Force One:
“We've had regime change.”
Mostly False
Donald Trump
stated on March 27, 2026 a speech to a Saudi investment conference:
“More Americans are working today than at any time in the history of our country.”
Half-True
Chris Wright
stated on March 12, 2026 an interview with Fox News:
The U.S. produces “more oil than we can consume. We’re a net oil exporter.”
Half-True
Donald Trump
stated on March 9, 2026 a press conference:
Iran “also has some Tomahawks.”
False

William Weld says 76% of Americans want Gary Johnson in debates





Donald Trump
stated on May 4, 2026 a White House event:








Donald Trump
stated on April 23, 2026 remarks at the White House:







Chris Wright
stated on April 19, 2026 an interview on CNN's "State of the Union":