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No Towering Problem in U.S. as Trump Takes Office

Without a major war or economic distress to galvanize Americans, no one issue facing the country dominates their concerns as President-elect Donald Trump begins his presidency.

Economy, Elections Top Problems Facing U.S.

The economy and elections top the list of the most important problems Americans say the U.S. faces today. Concerns about elections and election reform are at an all-time high.

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.

"Email" Dominates What Americans Have Heard About Clinton

Americans' reports of what they have read, seen or heard about Hillary Clinton over the past two months are dominated by references to emails, while recall about Donald Trump is more varied.

Republicans, Democrats Interpret Orlando Incident Differently

Most Republicans, 79%, interpret the recent mass shooting at an Orlando nightclub as an act of Islamic terrorism, while the majority of Democrats, 60%, perceive it as an act of domestic gun violence.

American Public Opinion, Terrorism and Guns

Before the Orlando shootings, Americans indicated that military actions against the Islamic State would be among the most effective ways to fight terrorism and that restrictions on Muslims would be among the least effective.

Eastern Europeans, CIS Residents See Russia, U.S. as Threats

In EU member states in Eastern Europe, residents see Russia as the biggest threat to their countries; in non-member states, the U.S. is a bigger threat. Former Soviet states see threats from both countries.

Majority in U.S. Now Dissatisfied With Security From Terrorism

Americans' satisfaction with the nation's security from terrorism fell significantly for the second year in a row. It is now at 43%, versus 59% last year and 69% in 2014. Satisfaction with U.S. military strength also dropped.

Americans More Worried About Terrorism Than Mass Shootings

Americans are more concerned about being the victim of a terrorist attack inspired by the Islamic State (47%) than being the victim of a mass shooting (38%). Republicans are more worried than Democrats about both potential events.

Anti-Terror: Visa Control, Airstrikes Seen as Most Effective

Americans are most likely to see overhauling the nation's visa waiver program and intensifying airstrikes against the Islamic State as effective against terrorism, of 11 measures tested. Using a religious test to prevent Muslims from entering ...
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