More than half of Americans are following election news closely, and many are already worn out
More than half of Americans (58%) say they are following news about candidates for the 2024 presidential election very or fairly closely.
Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
More than half of Americans (58%) say they are following news about candidates for the 2024 presidential election very or fairly closely.
A declining share of U.S. adults are following the news closely, and audiences are shrinking for several older types of news media.
Similar shares of U.S. adults believe news organizations are giving too much attention (32%) or too little attention (29%) to Biden’s age.
Most Americans say the U.S. government and technology companies should each take steps to restrict false information and extremely violent content online.
55% of journalists surveyed say that every side does not always deserve equal coverage in the news. 22% of Americans overall say the same.
Differences within each party on views of foreign policy emerge based on where Americans turn for political news.
The social media sites that journalists use most frequently for their jobs differ from those that the public turns to for news.
In studying voters’ views of election fraud, we found these views varied by whether people got their news from the Trump campaign.
Regardless of how the runoff elections in Georgia go, the Senate will be closely divided next year. And that is part of a long-running trend.
When Americans were asked to evaluate the media’s standing in the nation, 41% say news organizations are growing in their influence.
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