Americans are divided on whether colleges that brought students back to campus made the right decision
Half of U.S. adults say colleges and universities that brought students back to campus made the right decision, while 48% say they did not.
Half of U.S. adults say colleges and universities that brought students back to campus made the right decision, while 48% say they did not.
What does the 2020 electorate look like politically, demographically and religiously as the race enters its final days?
The shares of mothers and fathers who are working have fallen from 2019 to 2020, but the falloff has been comparable for each group.
More than one-third of Black eligible voters in the U.S. live in nine of the nation’s most competitive states.
More Black adults now say the country has work to do to address racial inequality; attitudes of White adults have changed little since 2019.
Before COVID-19, wages, job availability and health care costs mattered more than the stock market in Americans' views of how the economy was doing.
Half of adults who say they lost a job due to the coronavirus outbreak are still unemployed.
The share of Gen Z voters who are Hispanic is significantly higher than the share among other groups of voters.
In battleground states, Hispanics grew more than other racial or ethnic groups as a share of eligible voters.
After months of living amid a pandemic, many Americans expect their lives to remain changed even after the COVID-19 outbreak is over.