Two Years Into the Pandemic, Americans Inch Closer to a New Normal
Americans in 2022 find themselves in an environment that is at once greatly improved and frustratingly familiar.
Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
Americans in 2022 find themselves in an environment that is at once greatly improved and frustratingly familiar.
Around a third of U.S. school districts mention the importance of diversity, equity and inclusion in their mission statements. But these references are far more common in parts of the country won by Joe Biden in 2020 than in areas won by Donald Trump.
In battleground states, Hispanics grew more than other racial or ethnic groups as a share of eligible voters.
Donald Trump’s four-year tenure in the White House revealed extraordinary fissures in American society but left little doubt that he is a figure unlike any other in the nation’s history.
The biggest takeaway may be the extent to which the decidedly nonpartisan virus met with an increasingly partisan response.
America is in the midst of two major changes to its population: We are becoming majority non-white at the same time a record share is going gray. Explore these shifts in our new interactive data essay.
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