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Some U.S. Teachers Consider Career Change Over Safety Fears

Twenty-two percent of U.S. teachers say they have considered leaving the teaching profession because of issues related to school safety. However, most are satisfied with their profession and would make the same career choice again.

Despite Criticism, NRA Still Enjoys Majority Support in U.S.

Americans overall have a favorable opinion of the NRA, despite criticism of the groups' hard-line stance on gun restrictions. Conservatives are most likely to support the gun rights group; liberals are least likely.

Americans in Agreement With Supreme Court on Gun Rights

The Supreme Court's ruling that a District of Columbia ban on handgun ownership is unconstitutional appears to be solidly in step with public opinion. A clear majority of the U.S. public, 73%, believes the Constitution's Second Amendment ...

How to Coach Leaders to Be More Effective

Learn five qualities of great leaders, and how your coaching and the CliftonStrengths for Leaders Report can propel leaders to greater effectiveness.

Gallup Week-in-Review

Read about why Americans say they own guns, how an increase in the marriage rate could benefit the U.S. economy, Portuguese residents' disapproval of the country's leadership, and more in this week's review.

Crime Fears Rebound in U.S. After Lull During 2020 Lockdowns

Americans' worry about becoming a victim of 13 crimes is trending upward this year after edging mostly downward in 2020.

The Root Cause of Bloodshed in the Middle East: No Customers

The Middle East has collapsed into a state of chaos, conflict, and suffering that was unimaginable and unforeseen just four years ago. Hardly any experts or institutions predicted the wars and revolutions that have engulfed the region. And those ...

Gallup Week-in-Review

Read about the U.S. public's views of Russia, the factors Americans blame for mass shootings, global migrants' food and housing struggles, and more in this week's review.

Americans Wanted Gun Background Checks to Pass Senate

Sixty-five percent of Americans say the U.S. Senate should have passed the measure on April 17 that would have expanded background checks for gun purchases, while 29% agree with the Senate's failure to pass the measure.

Healthcare, Immigration Down as Most Important Problem

After the midterm elections, U.S. satisfaction has dipped to 31%, and mentions of immigration and healthcare as the most important problem have fallen. The government is again the top overall problem.