Will Misinformation, Hate Speech Concerns Justify Censorship?
A majority of voters have concerns about online misinformation and hate speech, but most are also worried about political censorship on the Internet.
A majority of voters have concerns about online misinformation and hate speech, but most are also worried about political censorship on the Internet.
At a time when the U.S. military is struggling with recruiting problems, most voters believe President Joe Biden is a weaker commander-in-chief than his predecessors.
More than two years after Russia invaded Ukraine, fewer American voters think Ukraine is winning the war.
After major news organizations distorted former President Donald Trump’s comments about a “bloodbath” for the auto industry, a majority of voters now agree with Trump that the news media are “the enemy of the people.”
Nearly half of voters say they’ve been personally hurt by President Joe Biden’s policies and, by an 11-point margin, think his economic policies are worse than former President Donald Trump’s.
President Joe Biden has expressed regret for calling a Venezuela-born murder suspect “illegal,” but most voters think that’s what such foreign law-breakers should be called.
By a narrow margin, more voters think former President Donald Trump cares about people like them than say the same of President Joe Biden.
After reports about a secretive Biden administration program to fly illegal immigrants into the United States, most U.S. voters oppose the program.
Most voters consider it important for the government to stop illegal immigration, and don’t think they’re doing a good job of it.
Many commentators have suggested that Democrats could replace President Joe Biden as their candidate, but former President Donald Trump leads two of the most high-profile alternatives.
Eight months before the presidential election, economic issues and immigration matter more to voters than abortion.
After the Supreme Court rejected attempts to disqualify former President Donald Trump from the ballot, a majority of Democratic voters now support another way to block Trump’s possible return to the White House.
While a majority of voters believe Elon Musk was correct to restore former President Donald Trump’s account on X – the social media platform formerly known as Twitter – two-thirds of Democrats disagree.
A majority of voters think the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and other government spies may be trying to pick the winner in this year’s election.
Although a majority of Americans voters now believe Joe Biden likely profited from Hunter Biden’s foreign business deals, most Democrats still don’t think so.
Four months after he emerged as the new Speaker of the House, Louisiana Republican Rep. Mike Johnson remains the most popular leader in Congress.
By a 13-point margin, more voters consider former President Donald Trump a stronger supporter of Israel than President Joe Biden.
Most voters think former President Donald Trump has got the Republican nomination locked up and, while they have preferences about his running mate, most say Trump’s veep pick won’t matter on Election Day.
North Carolina has added 5 million residents since 1980, and two-thirds of voters there support reducing immigration to control the state’s explosive growth.
Arizona Republican Kari Lake has a three-point lead over Democratic Rep. Ruben Gallego in this year’s U.S. Senate race, and Lake’s margin would be slightly wider if incumbent Sen. Kyrsten Sinema decides to seek reelection as an independent.