There are wide differences in support for Biden and Trump by voters’ gender, age, race and ethnicity, and education.
Immigrant status among who say science is their primary source of guidance on what's right and wrong by frequency feeling a ...
About half of voters (49%) say they have given a lot of thought to the candidates who are running in the 2024 presidential ...
Today, 35% of Americans approve of Biden’s job performance, while 62% disapprove. These views have remained largely stable ...
Voters do not express a high degree of confidence in Biden’s or Trump’s fitness for office, ethics, advisers or respect for democracy.
Age distribution among who say science is their primary source of guidance on what's right and wrong who are non-parents % of who say science is their primary source of guidance on what's right and ...
% of adults who say religion is somewhat important who are in the Houston Metro Area who are ages… Share Save Image Sample sizes and margins of error vary from ...
% of adults in South Carolina who are All Non-Christians who are… Share Save Image Sample sizes and margins of error vary from subgroup to subgroup, from year to ...
In 2019 women in the United States earned 82% of what men earned, according to a Pew Research Center analysis of median ...
Sample sizes and margins of error vary from subgroup to subgroup, from year to year and from state to state. You can see the sample size for the estimates in this ...
Mirroring changes in the U.S. population overall, registered voters have become more educated, more racially and ethnically diverse, older, and more religiously diverse over the past three decades.
The relationship between partisanship and voters’ religious affiliation continues to be strong – especially when it comes to whether they belong to any organized religion at all. The gap between ...