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Mississippians Go to Church the Most; Vermonters, Least

Mississippians were the most frequent churchgoers in the nation in 2009, with 63% of residents attending weekly or almost every week. Frequent church attendance clusters in the Southern and Midwestern states; Utah (56%) is the exception. ...

How to Create a Collaborative Culture

Learn how fostering a collaborative culture can positively impact your work and workplace, and discover some tools that can get you there.

Parent Income, Degree, Religion Key Factors in School Choices

The vast majority of U.S. children attend public school, but parents' choices of public, private, parochial or home-school are related to parents' education level, income and religion.

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.

A Letter to Elected Representatives, From the Average American

What average Americans would say in a letter to their elected representatives.

Americans Split Over New LGBT Protections, Restroom Policies

Americans are about evenly divided on both the need for new civil rights laws to protect LGBT people and on restroom policies for transgender individuals.

Top U.S. Insights From Gallup in 2021

Review U.S. public opinion from 2021 on President Biden, the coronavirus, and new highs and lows on a number of today's important cultural topics.

Catholics' Approval of Obama Little Changed

As the Obama administration has battled with Catholic groups over whether they should have to pay for contraceptives for employees, President Obama's approval rating among rank-and-file Catholics has shown no meaningful change.

Trump Job Approval Higher Than Approval of Him as a Person

Americans are more likely to approve of President Donald Trump's job performance (40%) than they are to approve of him as a person (34%) in the latest Gallup poll.

In U.S., Churchgoers Boast Better Mood, Especially on Sundays

Not only do Americans who attend a church, synagogue, or mosque frequently have higher well-being in general, but they also get an extra boost to their emotional state on Sundays -- while the rest of Americans see their mood decline.