"usa today" washington bureau chief susan paige. welcome both.s through the new data from iowa. these are made up of caucus goers who believe that donald trump really won the presidency in. >> yeah. i think there are two ways to look at the numbers. on the one hand the 51%, you might say i've seen polls that show two-thirds or three quarters believing donald trump's false claims about the election, so 51% might seem a little small. the way we asked this question was straight up, not is joe biden the legitimate president or did something go wrong in the 2020 election, do you believe straight up donald trump's claims that he ended up winning in 2020. 51% said yes. but the reason that this actually might seem bigger and more substantial than even that 51% is that it makes up more than 6 in 10 evangelicals, republican, self-identified republicans, the key members of the republican base, are more likely to buy the claims than not. overwhelmingly donald trump, the people who choose donald trump as their number one choice among the likely iowa republica