Analysis of our polls and other data shows no clear evidence of a religious revival among young adults. Read more about ...
Half of the world’s population lives in just seven countries. But some of the world’s religious groups are even more concentrated than that.
Frustration is common across the political spectrum regardless of which party holds the presidency. But the shares of ...
In 2016, 51% of U.S. adults said they followed the news all or most of the time, but that share fell to 36% in 2025.
Hispanics say Trump’s policies harm their group, but views of the president and policies differ widely by how they voted in 2024.
For example, young adults follow the news less closely than any other age group and are more likely to say they happen to ...
U.S. adults ages 65 and older lived alone in 2023, the most recent year with available data. That’s down from 29% in 1990.
While trust in government has been low for decades, the current measure is one of the lowest in the nearly seven decades since the question was first asked by the National Election Study, and it is ...
About half worry they or someone close to them might be deported, and a majority say they know of recent nearby ICE arrests or raids.
U.S. adults under 30 follow news less closely than any other age group. And they’re more likely to get (and trust) news from social media.
Majorities disapprove of the administration’s approach to immigration and say it’s doing too much to deport those in the U.S.
Yet in the U.S. and many other nations, social trust is far from ubiquitous. While a majority of U.S. adults (55%) say most people can be trusted, a sizable share (44%) say most people can’t be ...