Terror’s electoral joker card
With an unstable public mood on both sides of the Atlantic, terrorism could prove a political wildcard in both the United States and in Europe in the months ahead.
Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
With an unstable public mood on both sides of the Atlantic, terrorism could prove a political wildcard in both the United States and in Europe in the months ahead.
Both major U.S. political parties have a long history of splits, splinters and other schisms.
For SXSW, we gathered key facts about Americans’ views and uses of technology.
Recent polling shows a growing divide.
A majority of Americans predict that within 50 years, robots and computers will do much of the work currently done by humans, but few expect their own jobs to experience substantial impacts.
Americans have good reason to worry about competition from China, the country with which the U.S. has its largest merchandise trade deficit. But competition from high-value exporters such as Germany also poses a challenge that, so far, has been largely ignored on the campaign trail.
One-in-six (16%) of those who say they “definitely voted” in the 2014 midterm election have no record of voting in commercially available national voter files.
Hispanic voters this year make up an even larger share of the state’s registered voters than in past years, but the profile of the Latino electorate has shifted over the past decade or so.
A majority (56%) of Canadians say climate change is harming people now, while only 41% of Americans agree.
Public optimism among Israeli Arabs and Jews that a two-state solution is possible may be receding in Israel.
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