Amid pandemic, the long decline of in-person voting on Election Day is likely to accelerate this year
Votes cast on Election Day have grown steadily less significant over the past several election cycles as a share of total votes cast.
Votes cast on Election Day have grown steadily less significant over the past several election cycles as a share of total votes cast.
We developed this explainer to help people understand how, and why, the complex U.S. electoral process is even more so this time around.
Just half of registered voters expect to know results within a day or two of Election Day, including nearly identical shares who support Trump and Biden.
Mail-in ballots accounted for just over half of this year’s primary votes cast in the 37 states (plus D.C.) for which data is available.
Many Americans are heading into the 2020 election with a sense of uncertainty that goes beyond their traditional concerns over who will win.
Focus groups held across the two nations reveal the degree to which Americans and Britons see common challenges to local and national identity.
Democrats are more concerned than Republicans about the ease of voting and the broader integrity of the 2020 presidential election.
A majority of Americans say significant changes are needed in the "fundamental design and structure of American government."
The pandemic has had a divisive effect on a sense of national unity in many of the countries surveyed: A median of 46% feel more national unity now than before the coronavirus outbreak, while 48% think divisions have grown.
About six-in-ten registered voters in the five U.S. states where elections are conducted entirely by mail expect voting to be easy.