(Especially when it's your party which is in power)

Most Americans back NSA tracking phone records, prioritize probes over privacy  
By Jon Cohen
Washington Post
June 10 2013

A large majority of Americans say the federal government should focus on 
investigating possible terrorist threats even if personal privacy is 
compromised, and most support the blanket tracking of telephone records in an 
effort to uncover terrorist activity, according to a new Washington Post-Pew 
Research Center poll.

Fully 45 percent of all Americans say the government should be able to go 
further than it is, saying that it should be able to monitor everyone’s online 
activity if doing so would prevent terrorist attacks. A slender majority, 52 
percent, say no such broad-based monitoring should occur.

The new survey comes amid recent revelations of the National Security Agency’s 
extensive collection of telecommunications data to facilitate terrorism 
investigations.

Overall, 56 percent of Americans consider the NSA’s accessing of telephone call 
records of millions of Americans through secret court orders “acceptable,” 
while 41 percent call the practice “unacceptable.” In 2006, when news broke of 
the NSA’s monitoring of telephone and e-mail communications without court 
approval, there was a closer divide on the practice — 51 percent to 47 percent.

General priorities also are similar to what they were in 2006: Sixty-two 
percent of Americans now say it’s more important for the government to 
investigate terrorist threats, even if those investigations intrude on personal 
privacy, while 34 percent say privacy should be the focus, regardless of the 
effect on such investigations.

But with a Democratic president at the helm instead of a Republican, partisan 
views have turned around significantly.

Sixty-nine percent of Democrats say terrorism investigations, not privacy, 
should be the government’s main concern, an 18-percentage-point jump from early 
January 2006, when the NSA activity under the George W. Bush administration was 
first reported. Compared with that time, Republicans’ focus on privacy has 
increased 22 points.

The reversal on the NSA’s practices is even more dramatic. In early 2006, 37 
percent of Democrats found the agency’s activities acceptable; now nearly twice 
that number — 64 percent — say the use of telephone records is okay. By 
contrast, Republicans slumped from 75 percent acceptable to 52 percent today.

Compared with a 2002 Pew poll, Democrats are now 12 percentage points more apt 
to support the government’s monitoring of all e-mails and other online activity 
if officials say that it might help prevent terrorist attacks. On the flip 
side, the number of Republicans who say the government should not do this has 
increased by 13 points.

The poll was conducted Thursday through Sunday among a random national sample 
of 1,004 adults. Results from the full poll have a margin of sampling error of 
plus or minus 3.5 percentage points. The question on monitoring everyone’s 
online activity was asked starting Friday; results from that question have a 
4.5-point error margin.

Cohen is polling director for Capital Insight, Washington Post Media’s 
independent polling group. Capital Insight pollsters Peyton M. Craighill and 
Scott Clement contributed to this report.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/most-americans-support-nsa-tracking-phone-records-prioritize-investigations-over-privacy/2013/06/10/51e721d6-d204-11e2-9f1a-1a7cdee20287_story.html?tid=pm_politics_pop
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