Patrick Ruffini: The shape of polarization in America
Only a specific subset of the American population has become highly politically polarized: white voters with a college degree.
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Only a specific subset of the American population has become highly politically polarized: white voters with a college degree.
For the February 2023 Omnibus, we polled American voters on what they thought contributed to discrimination against Asian-Americans.
For the November 2022 Omnibus, we asked voters which decade they would pick if they could return America to the way it was in another time period.
In a year of rising tensions with China and Russia, we picked five questions to gauge whether voters have an appetite for an assertive foreign policy.
Echelon Insights finds voters approve most highly of John F. Kennedy and Ronald Reagan among recent presidents. Other presidents were more polarizing.
Echelon Insights finds that by a 10-point margin, voters support banning TikTok in the United States
Echelon presented Republicans and Democrats with hypothetical primary matchups between two candidates possessing a random set of attributes
By a 24-point margin voters say that companies are more to blame for the derailment in East Palestine than Pete Buttigieg or federal agencies.
Echelon Insights shows that Kamala Harris remains the leader of the pack should Biden not run in 2024, followed by Pete Buttigieg