Unsurprisingly, Americans are divided along party lines. Democrats are far more likely than Republicans to accuse the Trump administration of falsehoods and far less likely to charge the media with the same.

Other, less-obvious correlations emerge, too. For example, perceptions of the media are better at higher education levels than at lower education levels, and the reverse is true of Trump.

Among whites and nonwhites, perceptions of the media are similar, but views of the Trump administration are dramatically different. Almost three-quarters of nonwhites say the Trump administration regularly makes false claims, compared with half of whites.

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Americans are about split on whether Trump or media falsehoods are more worrisome; 43 percent say that false claims by the Trump administration are the bigger problem, while 40 percent say that false news stories are. About 1 in 10 say both are equally important.

It is worth noting that survey respondents answered using their own definitions of “regularly” and “false.” If the crux of a news report is accurate, but it includes an error requiring a correction, is the story false? If a Trump claim receives a single Pinocchio from The Washington Post Fact Checker for “some omissions and exaggerations” (see the rating system), is the statement false?

And what qualifies as regularly? The Fact Checker identified 417 false or misleading claims by the president during his first 91 days in office. That's 4.6 per day. I'd call that pretty regular, but perhaps others would not.

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In any case, false claims are not necessarily a hindrance for Trump. In one of the poll's most interesting findings, 1 in 6 Trump voters agree that the president regularly makes false claims — yet cast a ballot for him anyway. And 94 percent of the president's voters approve of his job performance.