After sinking in August from their convention highs, the favorable ratings for U.S. presidential candidates Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton show little to no positive momentum, found a Gallup poll released Wednesday.
Americans' exercise and smoking habits have improved while their eating habit has worsened slightly in the past eight years, found a new Gallup study.
Both U.S. presumptive presidential nominees Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump are gaining steam among their own parties, but remain unfavorable nationally, Gallup found in a poll.
Only 20 percent of Americans have high confidence in U.S. newspapers, hitting a all-time low since 1973, a latest Gallup poll found.
U.S. Republicans continue to follow the news of the presidential election more closely than Democrats, according to a Gallup poll released Monday.
Sixty-one percent of Americans say that marriage between same-sex couples should be recognized by the law as valid, found a Gallup poll released Thursday.
As the U.S. election season begins, only four in 10 Americans rate the situation in the U.S. as positive, which is well below the historical average, a Gallup poll released Wednesday found.
Twenty percent of U.S. registered voters say they will only vote for a candidate who shares their views on immigration, with another 60 percent saying it will be one of many important considerations they take into account, according to a Gallup poll released Wednesday.
Fewer than one-third of U.S. workers felt "engaged" in their jobs in 2014, and a majority of employees, 51 percent, were "not engaged," with 17.5 percent " actively disengaged," according to a Gallup poll released Wednesday.
For the third consecutive year, 52 percent of Americans say they do not believe it is the federal government's responsibility to ensure healthcare coverage for all Americans, a Gallup poll released Thursday found.
U.S. President Barack Obama's favorable ratings have dropped to a new low, with more Americans now viewing him unfavorably than favorably, found a Gallup poll released Thursday.
The number of Americans who plan to get insurance through a healthcare exchange - the centerpiece of the new healthcare law - has increased, a Gallup poll released Thursday has found.