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Americans More Positive About Effects of Immigration

Americans are more positive now than in 2007 about the effects that immigration has on several aspects of life in the U.S.

Solid Majority Still Opposes New Construction on Border Wall

Six in 10 Americans oppose expanding the physical barriers along the U.S.-Mexico border, essentially unchanged from seven months ago.

In U.S., 65% Favor Path to Citizenship for Illegal Immigrants

Most U.S. adults, 65%, continue to support allowing immigrants who are in the U.S. illegally to remain in the U.S. and become citizens after meeting certain requirements over time. Hispanics are more likely than whites or blacks to favor the ...

Why Leaders Can't Miss Unhappiness Again

Read an excerpt from Gallup's new book, "Blind Spot: The Global Rise of Unhappiness and How Leaders Missed It."

World Split on Whether Immigrants Take Jobs Away

Worldwide, 27% of adults think migrants mostly take the low-paying, low-prestige jobs that citizens in their countries do not want, and 29% say migrants mostly take jobs that citizens do want. Another 18% think both may be happening.

American Public Opinion and Immigration

Donald Trump's controversial remarks about illegal immigrants in his presidential bid announcement come at a time when most Americans do not perceive immigration as the top problem facing the nation today, but as an important issue.

Before Title 42 Expired, Who Wanted to Come to the U.S.?

Gallup's latest data from Latin America and the Caribbean, collected before Title 42 expired, highlight that millions of adults would come to the U.S. if they could.

In U.S., Worry About Illegal Immigration Steady

About six in 10 Americans worry about illegal immigration, similar to recent years but down from 2006-2011 due to declines among Democrats and independents.

Less Than Half in U.S. OK With Treatment of Immigrants, Arabs

Among six key groups in society, Americans are least satisfied with the way Arabs and immigrants are treated in the U.S. In contrast, 75% of Americans are satisfied with the way Asians are treated -- the highest satisfaction level.

In U.S., Cyberdisruption Most Critical Threat

Americans see cyberterrorism as the most critical of 11 threats to U.S. vital interests. Nuclear weapons development by Iran or by North Korea are next, followed by international terrorism.
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