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A Letter to Elected Representatives, From the Average American

What average Americans would say in a letter to their elected representatives.

Which Issues Are the Most Critical for Trump, Clinton?

As the presidential campaign reaches the home stretch, terrorism and immigration for Donald Trump -- and race relations and the role of government for Hillary Clinton -- may be the highest return-on-investment areas for each to discuss.

In U.S., Very Religious Have Higher Well-Being Across All Faiths

Very religious Americans across all major religious groups have higher well-being than those who are moderately religious or nonreligious. Jewish Americans have the best overall well-being, despite being the least religious overall.

Religious Identity and the 2020 Presidential Election

Americans' political predispositions vary significantly by their underlying religious identity, providing an important way to understand the 2020 election.

Gallup Vault: Black Americans' Preferred Racial Label

Reviewing Black Americans' preferred term for their race in 1969 and a half-century later, in 2019.

Protestant, Catholic Views of Clinton and Trump Not Monolithic

Protestants are more likely to be positive about Trump than Clinton, while the reverse is true of Catholics, but these views differ significantly when these two groups are divided by race and ethnicity.

More College Students Than U.S. Adults Say Free Speech Is Secure

U.S. college students are more likely than U.S. adults overall to view First Amendment rights as secure in society today. And while students are inclined to say free speech rights are stronger now than in the past, adults tend to say they are ...

Atheists, Muslims See Most Bias as Presidential Candidates

Just over half of Americans would vote for an atheist (54%) or a Muslim (58%) for president, the least among nine hypothetical candidates. More than nine in 10 would vote for Jewish, Hispanic, Catholic, female, or black candidates.

Three-Quarters of Americans Identify as Christian

About three-quarters of Americans in 2014 identify with a Christian religion, 6% with a non-Christian religion and 19% have no formal religious identity. More than half of Americans attend religious services monthly or more often.

Lebanon's Convergence of Crises

Kim Ghattas joins the podcast to discuss the multiple crises that people in Lebanon are enduring as the two-year anniversary of one of the largest non-nuclear explosions in history approaches.
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