How Americans view the Trump administration’s approach to the Russia-Ukraine war
59% of Americans say they are not confident that Trump can make wise decisions about the Russia-Ukraine war.
Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
59% of Americans say they are not confident that Trump can make wise decisions about the Russia-Ukraine war.
Here are key facts about the 3.8 million public school teachers who work in America’s classrooms and how they view their jobs.
A majority of Democrats (60%) are highly concerned about press freedoms – about double the share of Republicans (28%).
Democrats and Democratic leaners are more likely than Republicans and Republican leaners to support government restrictions on false information online.
More than four-in-ten Americans (44%) back bans on student cellphone use during the entire school day, up from 36% last fall.
Republicans are far more likely than Democrats to say the United States is providing too much support to Ukraine (42% vs. 13%).
Americans are most skeptical about U.S. trade with China: 10% say it benefits the U.S. more than China, while 46% take the opposite view.
The partisan gap in Republican and Democratic views of their parties’ futures (35 percentage points) is much larger than after any recent election.
In this Q&A, we speak with Brian Kennedy, a senior researcher at the Center, on why and how we conducted the survey of AI experts.
Six-in-ten U.S. adults say being a man helps a lot or a little when it comes to a person’s ability to get ahead in the U.S., compared with 14% who say it hurts
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