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Joe Biden and the Catholic Factor

Biden is only the fourth Catholic major-party presidential nominee in U.S. history, but it's unclear if his religion will be a significant factor in the election.

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.

British Muslims Feel, Well, British

British Muslims don't feel their fellow citizens believe them to be British.

Most Muslim Americans See No Justification for Violence

A new Gallup report on Muslims in America reveals that Muslim Americans are more likely than members of other faith groups to reject attacks on civilians by either the military or individuals.

Republicans and Democrats Disagree on Muslim Hearings

While 52% of all Americans say Thursday's scheduled House Homeland Security Committee hearings to investigate terrorist recruitment efforts in the American Muslim community are appropriate, there are sharp partisan differences: 69% of ...

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.

Support for Nontraditional Candidates Varies by Religion

Christians' reluctance to back a presidential candidate who is gay, an atheist, a socialist or Muslim may limit these candidates' chances nationally. Nonreligious Americans' coolness toward evangelicals dampens their chances.

Muslims Give Obama Highest Job Approval; Mormons, Lowest

Among major religious groups in the United States, Muslims give President Barack Obama the highest average approval ratings and Mormons, the lowest. Jews and those with no religious identity rate Obama higher than the national average, while ...

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.
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