Poll: 4 in 10 Americans Say Religion Is ‘Very Important’ to Them
Forty percent of Americans say religion is “very important” in their lives, and nearly 30 percent say they “never” attend religious services, a The Economist/YouGov Poll found.
Forty percent of Americans say religion is “very important” in their lives, and nearly 30 percent say they “never” attend religious services, a The Economist/YouGov Poll found.
Many men whose partners have an abortion often experience worsened mental health and express intense feelings of regret, a new study found.
The majority of Americans say their personal financial situation is getting worse.
A survey from Rasmussen Reports shows that more likely voters blame mental health for mass shootings than blame guns.
A growing share of Americans say acceptance of transgenderism has gone “too far” and a majority reject using the “gender-neutral” pronouns “they/them,” a new Wall Street Journal-NORC poll found.
A majority of Americans believe college is “Not worth the cost because people often graduate without specific job skills and with a large amount of debt to pay off,” a Wall Street Journal-NORC poll found.
The percentage of Americans who say patriotism, religion, family, and other traditional American values are “very important” is declining.
Two-thirds of economists say they are not confident that the Fed can bring down inflation to two percent without triggering a recession.
A majority of voters say they have less trust in public health officials and the news media because of the way they handled the pandemic.
A majority of Americans think it is “not appropriate” for public school teachers to talk about politics in the classroom.
Nearly half of U.S. adults say they do not expect their lives to “return to pre-pandemic normalcy,” a Gallup News poll found.
A majority of Gen Z and Millennials globally believe that women’s rights “have gone far enough” and that “men are being discriminated against.”
A majority of Floridians say they support legislation to protect unborn babies once a heartbeat can be detected, a new poll found.
Nearly 60 percent of registered U.S. voters say they have “less money in their pocket than they did a year ago,” according to a Fox News poll released on Sunday.
Roughly 20 percent of Gen Z adults identify as LGBT, and LGBT identification overall has become much more common in the past decade.
U.S. voters “strongly prefer” capitalism to socialism, a sentiment which has increased since April of 2021, a poll from Rasmussen Reports found.
Depression and thoughts of suicide have dramatically increased among teen girls, following a ten-year trend, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Roughly six out of ten young men report being single, as the share of U.S. adults “going it alone” continues to steadily rise.
Young Americans are expressing “ambivalence” about online dating, some saying its convenience is bogged down by the “illusion of nearly limitless dating partners” that can lead to greater relationship dissatisfaction.
While Americans say a potential partner being “very religious” is more negative than positive, not believing in God is a “greater liability.”
Republicans are more satisfied with their relationships than Democrats, polling from the Survey Center on American Life found.
Roughly 1 in 4 millennials say their parents cover their rent, a new poll conducted by OnePoll on behalf of Chartway Credit Union found.
Only 35 percent of parents say it is “extremely or very important” to them that their children have similar religious beliefs to their own.
Many American parents expressed concern that their children “might struggle with anxiety and depression at some point.”
Former President Donald J. Trump maintains a double-digit lead over his potential opponents in a hypothetical 2024 Republican primary survey.
Once again, Americans rank Christmas as their favorite holiday, and half of U.S. adults plan to attend religious services this season.
A majority of Americans still believe Jesus Christ — not Santa — is the reason for the Christmas season, a new poll found.
Roughly one-third of President Biden’s 2020 voters do not believe he should run again in 2024, a recent Yahoo!News/YouGov survey found.
Over one-third (37 percent) of small businesses could not pay their rent in full or on time in October.
More Americans are taking on credit card debt as skyrocketing inflation for basic necessities continues to burden families.
Former Gov. Eric Greitens (R-MO) has maintained his lead in Missouri’s Republican primary contest for the U.S. Senate, per a survey.
A veteran school board member in Cedar Grove, New Jersey, is facing a recall after she distributed a gender survey to K-12 students.
Seventy-one percent of middle-class Americans say they are reducing spending at restaurants because of high prices.
Investors’ fears of a recession are at their highest levels since the 2020 Chinese Coronavirus pandemic as a net 58 percent of fund managers admitted to taking fewer risks than usual, a Bank of America survey revealed.
A survey has found that 67.5 percent of voters believe corporations should not take a public stance on abortion “on behalf of their workers.”
High inflation and gas prices are causing a negative impact on American workers’ ability to pay for other expenses, according to a Harris survey.
Republican candidate Dr. Mehmet Oz trails Lt. Democrat Gov. John Fetterman by 4.4 percentage points in the race for Pennsylvania’s U.S. Senate seat being vacated by Sen. Pat Toomey (R-PA), while state Sen. Doug Mastriano (R) is less than three points behind Attorney General Josh Shapiro in the state’s gubernatorial race, a Cygnal survey has found.
A survey of residents of Finland has revealed that a majority would be prepared to fight for their country if a war were declared as Finland looks to join the NATO alliance. The survey, conducted by the Worldwide Independent Network (WIN),
Most Americans believe President Joe Biden has a conflict of interest in Ukraine due to his family’s shady business dealings, a Convention of States Action/Trafalgar Group survey released this week found.
A survey of more than 500 principals found that nearly four in ten of the school leaders expect to step down within the next three years.