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Economic Problems, Corruption Fail to Dent Putin's Image

Russians' approval of President Vladimir Putin is undiminished from the high ratings they have been giving him since the annexation of Crimea in 2014.

Putin's Image Rises in U.S., Mostly Among Republicans

More Americans now hold a favorable view of Vladimir Putin than in 2015, though the vast majority still view the Russian leader unfavorably.

Americans Mixed on Secretary of State Rex Tillerson

Recently confirmed Secretary of State Rex Tillerson begins his role with Americans viewing him about as favorably (36%) as unfavorably (33%). Nearly as many (30%) are unfamiliar with him.

Majority in Russia See Domestic Violence as Serious Problem

Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a law Tuesday that decriminalizes certain types of domestic violence -- which the majority of Russians (58%) continue to see as a serious problem in their country and few (22%) say their government is ...

Four in Five Americans View Syria Unfavorably

Americans' negative views of Syria have grown, as four in five adults now say they have an unfavorable view of the country -- a new high in Gallup's trend. Now only North Korea has a worse image among Americans than Syria.

Americans See Russia Less Negatively, as Less of a Threat

Americans view Russia slightly more favorably now than they did in 2015, yet these favorability ratings are still half as high as they were a decade ago. U.S. adults also are less likely to see Russia as a critical threat to the U.S.

How Policies Discussed in Democratic Debate Fare With the Public

In a highly watched debate, Bernie Sanders and Hillary Clinton presented their different policy plans. Gallup assesses what the American public thinks about major ideas presented by these Democrats.

Tale of Two Presidents: Obama and Putin

Russian President Vladimir Putin is not popular globally, but he is respected back home. President Barack Obama is popular abroad, but slightly less so at home. Should leaders worry about how they're perceived globally?

Canada, Great Britain Are Americans' Most Favored Nations

Among 22 countries, Americans hold the highest regard for their strongest allies, including Canada (92%) and Great Britain (90%). At 82%, American favorability toward France exceeds its highest measured level in 24 years of polling.

Americans Increasingly See Russia as Threat, Top U.S. Enemy

Americans now regard Russia as the greatest U.S. enemy, by a slim margin over North Korea. They increasingly view Russia's military power as a critical threat to the U.S., and their favorable ratings of Russia have sunk to 24%.
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