Americans’ support for school cellphone bans has ticked up since last year
More than four-in-ten Americans (44%) back bans on student cellphone use during the entire school day, up from 36% last fall.
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More than four-in-ten Americans (44%) back bans on student cellphone use during the entire school day, up from 36% last fall.
The gap between the numbers of Democrats and Republicans who say protecting the environment is a top priority is 37 points.
In most nations surveyed, large majorities say they have mobile phones.
About six-in-ten Americans say they sought health information online in the past year.
More than eight-in-ten favor background checks for private gun sales and sales at gun shows.
The number of Americans who are worried they will not have enough income and assets for retirement is up 13 percentage points since 2009.
On illegal immigration, about four-in-ten give equal priority to better border security and creating a path to citizenship.
Three quarters say it is very important that public libraries offer free access to computers and the internet.
Two years after Arab Spring protests exploded in Egypt, few Americans say leadership changes in Middle East will be good for the U.S.
John Kerry, the secretary of state nominee, gets mixed ratings from the public, with 39% offering a favorable view and 36% an unfavorable one.
Republicans were 21 percentage points more likely than Democrats last fall to very closely follow news about the investigation into the attack on the U.S. consulate in Benghazi.