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Securing the border is seen as the top immigration priority
New Scripps News/Ipsos poll also finds that a majority support both a path to citizenship for dreamers and mass deportation, underscoring the deep partisan divides on how to best handle the issue
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Mental Health seen as the biggest Health issue
According to the 2024 Ipsos Health Service Report, 44% across 31 countries rate the quality of the healthcare they receive as good, but access to treatment and not enough staff are seen as major systemic challenges
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Half of Americans never think they'll get COVID again
Half of Americans (49%) believe they'll never get COVID again, according to new polling from the Ipsos Consumer Tracker
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Majority of Americans say Harris won the debate
New ABC News/Ipsos polling finds Harris has slight lead on the ballot, even as Trump is seen as better on the issues most important to Americans for the election
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Will the Harris-Trump debate move the needle?
Below are five charts on who watched the debate, how Americans felt about Harris and Trump following the debate, and how, if at all, the debate will affect the race to the White House
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Harris maintains slight edge over Trump among voters nationwide
Half of registered voters view Harris as the debate winner
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News
The future of news matters for brands, the general public, and … democracy itself. Here are the forces that could shape the headlines, businesses’ bottom lines and everything in between.
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Why news is worth protecting and how to save it for our collective futures
Contrary to the saying, no news is actually not good news, says What the Future Editor Matt Carmichael. Here’s what publishers, brands and citizens can take away from this issue.
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Shifts: Algorithms, globalization and infotainment
Tomorrow’s information landscape won’t look like yesterday’s news. Here are three of the forces driving that shift.
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How news can thrive by borrowing from tech and CPG playbooks
As audiences and their attitudes shift, businesses of all sorts need to take inspiration from other industries — and the press is no exception, says The New York Times’ David Rubin.