Those on ideological right favor fewer COVID-19 restrictions in most advanced economies
Those on the political right are more likely to say there should have been fewer public activity restrictions during the COVID-19 outbreak.
Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
Those on the political right are more likely to say there should have been fewer public activity restrictions during the COVID-19 outbreak.
Republican- and Democratic-led states alike already require hundreds of thousands of citizens to be vaccinated against various diseases.
As 2021 draws to a close, here are some of Pew Research Center’s most striking research findings from the past year.
Dissatisfaction with the functioning of democracy is linked to concerns about the economy, the pandemic and social divisions.
Publics disagree about whether restrictions on public activity, such as stay-at-home orders or mandates to wear masks in public, have gone far enough to combat COVID-19.
The share of Americans viewing illegal immigration as a ‘very big’ problem has increased.
In Americans’ views of some aspects of the COVID-19 outbreak, there is little, or only modest, partisan difference.
The biggest takeaway may be the extent to which the decidedly nonpartisan virus met with an increasingly partisan response.
In the nearly nine months since the coronavirus outbreak was declared a national emergency, almost every part of the country has been directly affected by the loss of life resulting from the virus.
Just 9% of the public says it will be less than six months before most public activities operate about as they did before the outbreak.
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