5 facts about presidential and vice presidential debates
Here are five important things to know before the first presidential debate kicks off next month in Cleveland.
Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
Here are five important things to know before the first presidential debate kicks off next month in Cleveland.
More than four-in-ten U.S. businesses with paid employees are in industries likely to be financially affected more deeply by the outbreak.
Older Americans are more likely than younger adults to feel their health is at risk, while younger people are focused on economic threats.
Remittances – money sent by migrants to their home countries – are projected to fall by a record 20% this year.
Some 6.2 million U.S. adults – or 2.4% of the country’s adult population – report being two or more races.
COVID-19 may yet do what years of advocacy have failed to: Make telework a benefit available to more than a relative handful of U.S. workers.
In 1965, America’s verdict on Selma was clear: Polling showed the public clearly siding with the demonstrators, not with the state of Alabama.
In this archived post, we take a look at what polls showed about the American people during the Kennedy years.
Many Americans say the country hasn’t gone far enough in giving black people equal rights with whites. Most believe slavery continues to impact black people’s status.
Many of the millions of Americans voting in Tuesday’s midterm elections will have to do so while working around the demands of their jobs – hitting their polling places before work, taking an extra-long lunch break or going afterward and hoping to make it before the polls close. As they stand in line, many of them may wonder why it is that the United States votes on a Tuesday, of all days.
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