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Ipsos Core Political : Presidential Approval Tracker (01/20/2022)
President Joe Biden is ending his first year as president with his lowest approval rating yet, and with nearly two-thirds of Americans believing the country is off on the wrong track.
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How Inflation is Changing Consumer Behavior
We share data exploring ways consumers are changing their buying decisions as inflation soars.
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Pharmaceutical and banking companies and governments are now seen as more trustworthy
New global data from Ipsos shows pharmaceutical and banking companies see a rise in trust. Government remains the least trusted sector, despite a small uptick.
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Economic outlooks among women in NYC
New poll on behalf of AAUW examines how some women in NYC feel financially insecure – and not just because of the pandemic
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Ipsos Core Political : Presidential Approval Tracker (01/13/2022)
President Biden’s overall approval rating remains stable, but his approval rating on COVID-19 has dropped
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Ipsos Core Political : Presidential Approval Tracker (01/06/2022)
Americans are feeling more optimistic about the direction of the country one year out from the January 6th incident at the Capitol
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Most say U.S. Capitol rioters posed a threat to democracy
New ABC News/Ipsos poll shows that nearly one year after the attack on the U.S. Capitol partisan views of the event differ
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Americans value free speech, but differ on what is, or should be, protected by the First Amendment
“Free Expression in America Post-2020,” a new Knight Foundation-Ipsos report, explores attitudes toward and understandings of First Amendment freedoms, shining a light on how opinion diverges across racial, ethnic, and partisan lines
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One year after Jan. 6 U.S. Capitol riot, concern about misinformation is high
New Ipsos poll, provided exclusively to the BBC, finds that significant portions of the American public believe conspiracy theories around Covid, the election, and QAnon
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Seven in ten Americans say the country is in crisis, at risk of failing
New NPR/Ipsos poll finds a year after January 6th, Americans remain divided on interpretation of the event