Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
About
Follow
My Account
Log in
View Account
Log out
Donate
U.S. Politics & Policy
Menu
Research Areas
Home
U.S. Politics
Media & News
Social Trends
Religion
Internet & Tech
Science
Hispanics
Global
Methods
Publications
Topics
Question Search
Datasets
Methodology
Experts
October 2, 2015
Contrasting Partisan Perspectives on Campaign 2016
Economy Remains Top Campaign Issue
Next
→
←
Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
Download
Economy Remains Top Campaign Issue
Embed
Report Materials
Complete Report PDF
Topline
September 2015 Political Survey Dataset
Full Report
Contrasting Partisan Perspectives on Campaign 2016
Report Infographics
How Possible Democratic Primary Voters View Candidate Positions
Democrats Ideologically Divided Over Candidate Support for Reducing Size of Large Banks, Iran Nuclear Agreement
GOP Voters’ Views of ‘New Ideas,’ Experience and the 2016 Campaign
Support for the GOP Candidates Varies by Income, Education, Gender, Religiosity
Democratic Divide on Cutting Size of Banks Seen in 2016 Preferences
Support for Democratic Candidates Varies by Age, Race
Economy Remains Top Campaign Issue
Republicans More Satisfied With Their Field Than in 2007, 2011
Early on, GOP Voters Are More Engaged
How Possible Republican and Democratic Primary Voters Assess Candidates’ Positions
Voters Prioritize Positions More Than Electability
10-2-2015 About
Wide Gaps Among Possible GOP Primary Voters in Views of Planned Parenthood Funding and Compromise With Democrats
Copyright 2019 Pew Research Center
About
Terms & Conditions
Privacy Policy
Reprints, Permissions & Use Policy
Feedback
Careers