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Most Americans place blame for Silicon Valley Bank's collapse on executives' poor decision-making
Nearly six in ten (59%) Americans put "a lot" of the blame for the collapse on the decisions the bank's executives made — something that majorities of Democrats (58%) and Republicans (61%) agree on.
2 days agoArticle
Republicans are less likely this week to see candidates' hush-money payments as a crime
By 46% to 34%, Americans say Trump should face criminal charges over paying adult-film star Stormy Daniels money for her silence about a sexual encounter in 2006. Democrats (77% to 11%) and Independents (44% to 30%) are more likely than not to say Trump should face criminal charges — but only 14% of Republicans agree.
3 days agoArticle
Gen Zers and Millennials are reshaping the party divide on guns
Gen Z and Millennial Republicans are more likely than older Republicans to believe that gun laws should be more restrictive (39% vs. 22%).
5 days agoArticle
Most Americans favor some aid to Ukraine, though fewer expect a Ukrainian victory
Last week, more Americans believed Ukraine was beating Russia (31% to 18%). This week, as many believe Russia is ahead as say Ukraine is (23% to 23%); 36% say neither is.
8 days agoArticle
The share of Americans who say the U.S. favors Israel over Palestine has fallen since 2017
The latest Economist/YouGov poll explores Americans' stances about the conflict and finds that while Americans' sympathies have shifted little over the past five years, the shares who view the U.S. government as siding with Israel and who see see helping as Israel as an important goal for the U.S. in the Middle East have declined.
8 days agoArticle
A growing share of Americans see China as a major economic threat
One 9% of Americans see China's rapid economic rise as having been good for the U.S. Far more see it as either bad (33%) or neither bad nor good (39%).
9 days agoArticle
A small but growing share of Americans approve of the people who took over the Capitol on Jan. 6
Today, one-third of Americans (34%) say the people involved in the Capitol takeover were participating in “legitimate political discourse,” while roughly half (48%) say they were participating in “a violent insurrection.”
9 days agoArticle
A growing share of Republicans see Trump's 2016 hush money payment as a serious issue
Nearly half of Republicans (45%) view the charge that the Trump campaign paid an adult film actress $130,000 to remain silent about an alleged sexual encounter with Trump as a very or somewhat serious issue; 87% of Democrats and 65% of Americans overall agree.
9 days agoArticle
Would U.S. adults rather have a low-paying job that they love or a high-paying job that they hate?
While most Americans who are older than 55 (59%) say that they would take a low-paying job they love over a high-paying job they hate, that preference decreases with age.
10 days agoArticle
Do Americans think being moral is the same thing as following the law?
Laws regulate behavior in society, but do Americans believe that their laws and moral values are aligned?
10 days agoArticle
How do Americans feel about regulation of public universities?
Recent polling by YouGov shows that Americans are largely divided on issues of campus speech, DEI initiatives, CRT programs, and state intervention in college curricula.
10 days agoArticle
What Americans think about social media and mental health
A new YouGov poll finds that 88% of Americans believe social media is at least somewhat responsible for the increase of depression among teenagers.
14 days agoArticle
Two-thirds of Americans believe that the COVID-19 virus originated from a lab in China
According to the latest Economist/YouGov poll, 66% of Americans — including 53% of Democrats and 85% of Republicans — say it is definitely or probably true that the COVID-19 virus originated from a lab in China.
16 days agoArticle
More than one-third of Americans have not filled a prescription because of its cost
Regardless of whether they have personally struggled to afford medication, Americans generally support the government negotiating prices with insurance companies.
16 days agoArticle
Most Americans do not want a national divorce of red and blue states
One in four Republicans and 16% of Democrats would support their state’s secession.
16 days agoArticle
Many Americans remain uncertain about the origins of Havana syndrome
Americans — and Democrats in particular — are now somewhat less likely than they were a year ago to see Havana syndrome as the result of a targeted attack by a foreign government, and somewhat more likely to see it as a mass psychogenic illness, or real symptoms resulting from an erroneous belief of an exposure to a health threat.
18 days agoArticle
Which industries do Americans think should be more regulated?
Pharmaceuticals, artificial intelligence, and social media top the list of industries Americans believe should be more regulated. Cannabis is the most divisive industry polled, with roughly equal shares saying it should be more and less regulated.
19 days agoArticle
Most Americans think Supreme Court decisions often are influenced by justices' political beliefs
How do Americans compare the Supreme Court's ideology to that of the American public in general? Two in five (42%) believe the Supreme Court is more conservative than the American public, up 12 points from 2018.
23 days agoArticle
More Americans prefer taking a strong stand to protect Taiwan than would choose good China relations
By 51% to 24%, Americans say it is more important for the U.S. "to take a strong stand so that China does not take over Taiwan by force" than "for the U.S. to maintain good relations with China."
24 days agoArticle
One year on: European and American attitudes to the war in Ukraine
Nations are at odds over peace negotiations
30 days ago