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Plenty of Common Ground Found in Abortion Debate
"Pro-choice" and "pro-life" Americans tend to back abortions needed to protect women's vital health and to support certain notification policies, and oppose late-term abortions. The two groups disagree most sharply about abortions in the first ...
Common State Abortion Restrictions Spark Mixed Reviews
Large majorities of Americans favor the broad intent of several types of abortion restriction laws that are now common in many states, but have mixed or negative reactions to others. The majority of Republicans are in favor of all seven ...
Americans Still Split Along "Pro-Choice," "Pro-Life" Lines
Americans are closely divided in their abortion positions, with 49% calling themselves "pro-choice" and 45% "pro-life," similar to a year ago. Public support for making abortion legal in either all cases or no cases is much lower, at 27% and ...
How Do Americans View Higher Inflation?
Inflation has become Americans' top concern, both nationally and in terms of their personal financial situation. What they want to do about it is less clear.
In U.S., Nonreligious, Postgrads Are Highly "Pro-Choice"
Large majorities of Americans with postgraduate education as well as non-Christians continue to identify as "pro-choice" rather than "pro-life" on abortion, even as Americans' overall support for the pro-choice position has declined.
Republicans More Unified Than Democrats on Abortion
Roughly two-thirds of Republicans across most major gender, age, educational, and income lines describe themselves as "pro-life," while about a quarter call themselves "pro-choice." By contrast, Democrats' support for the "pro-choice" label ...
Women in Swing States Have Gender-Specific Priorities
Female voters in 12 key swing states name abortion as the most important issue for women in this election. Male voters are most likely to name jobs as the top issue for men.
Religious Group Voting and the 2020 Election
Biden may have picked up marginal support among White evangelical Protestants and Catholics this year compared with 2016, but it is difficult to determine what impact it may have had on election outcomes.
Partisan Differences Growing on a Number of Issues
Republicans and Democrats have increasingly different views on many policy and social issues, but on several, the party gap has not changed or has even narrowed.
Update: Evangelicals, Trump and the Election
The evangelical vote is a topic of high interest, but defining who evangelicals are and understanding their voting intentions present challenges.