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Military, Small Business, Police Still Stir Most Confidence

Americans' confidence in institutions is broadly stable, but organized religion has sunk to another low while big business and banks have recovered slightly.

In U.S., Four in 10 Report Attending Church in Last Week

Nearly four in 10 Americans report that they attended religious services in the past seven days, similar to the percentages Gallup found in 1940 and 1950, although there have been significant fluctuations over time.

Ambassador Andrew Young on Faith, Justice, Government, MLK

Ambassador Andrew Young joins the podcast to discuss his life and career.

40% of Americans Believe in Creationism

Four in 10 Americans have a creationist view of human origins, while 33% believe humans evolved with God's guidance and 22% without it.

Amid Pandemic, Confidence in Key U.S. Institutions Surges

Americans express more confidence than they did last year in two institutions that have been challenged during the coronavirus pandemic -- the medical system and public schools. Confidence in police has fallen to a record-low level.

Support for Israel in U.S. Hampered by Declining Religiosity

Protestants and highly religious Americans, traditionally Israel's most sympathetic supporters, are shrinking in size.

Americans' Strong Support for Euthanasia Persists

Majorities of most subgroups of Americans remain supportive of euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide, but weekly churchgoers are opposed to both.

Exploring Creative Strengths Tools: Cascade, Strengths Twins

Learn about the Cascade strengths report and the Strengths Twins initiative, CliftonStrengths tools created by a strengths coach who uses them in his church.

Gallup Vault: In 1975, an FBI Under Fire

In 1975, Americans' image of the FBI was much less positive than 10 years earlier, following revelations about FBI surveillance practices.

Religiosity Playing an Expected Role in Views of Trump

Highly religious Americans give Donald Trump higher job approval ratings than those who are not religious -- an expected pattern, given the relationship between religiosity and partisanship in politics today.