Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
Newsletters
Press
Donate
My Account
Read our research on:
Congress
|
Economy
|
Gender
Research Topics
All Publications
Methods
Short Reads
Tools & Resources
Experts
About
Topics
Politics & Policy
International Affairs
Immigration & Migration
Race & Ethnicity
Religion
Generations & Age
Gender & LGBTQ
Family & Relationships
Economy & Work
Science
Internet & Technology
News Habits & Media
Methodological Research
Full topic list
Regions & Countries
Asia & the Pacific
Europe & Russia
Latin America
Middle East & North Africa
North America
Sub-Saharan Africa
Multiple Regions / Worldwide
Formats
Features
Fact Sheets
Videos
Data Essays
Research Topics
Topics
Politics & Policy
International Affairs
Immigration & Migration
Race & Ethnicity
Religion
Generations & Age
Gender & LGBTQ
Family & Relationships
Economy & Work
Science
Internet & Technology
News Habits & Media
Methodological Research
Full topic list
Regions & Countries
Asia & the Pacific
Europe & Russia
Latin America
Middle East & North Africa
North America
Sub-Saharan Africa
Multiple Regions / Worldwide
Formats
Features
Fact Sheets
Videos
Data Essays
All Publications
Methods
Short Reads
Tools & Resources
Experts
About
My Account
DONATE
Read our research on:
Congress
|
Economy
|
Gender
Home
Research Topics
Politics & Policy
Generations, Age & Politics
Pew Research Center
January 18, 2019
The Generation Gap in American Politics
Generations defined
←
Prev Page
Page
1
Page
2
Page
3
Page
4
Page
5
Page
6
Page
7
You are reading page
8
Next Page
→
Download
Generations defined
Embed
Post Infographics
The Generation Gap in American Politics
Generational differences in job approval much wider for both Obama and Trump
Generations defined
Growing gap on whether discrimination is main barrier to blacks’ progress
Across generations, increasing shares say immigrants strengthen the country
Nation’s growing diversity reflected in its younger generations
Millennials least likely to say belief in God is necessary to be moral
Most Millennials have ‘consistently liberal’ or ‘mostly liberal’ views; Silents remain most conservative cohort
Generations defined
Copyright 2023 Pew Research Center
About
Terms & Conditions
Privacy Policy
Reprints, Permissions & Use Policy
Feedback
Careers