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
July 29, 2019
Climate Change and Russia Are Partisan Flashpoints in Public’s Views of Global Threats
Fewer Americans view North Korea’s nuclear program, ISIS as ‘major threats’ than did so two years ago
Next
→
←
Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
Download
Fewer Americans view North Korea’s nuclear program, ISIS as ‘major threats’ than did so two years ago
Embed
Report Materials
Complete Report PDF
Topline
Full Report
Climate Change and Russia Are Partisan Flashpoints in Public’s Views of Global Threats
Report Infographics
Wide partisan gaps on threat from climate change, Russia; smaller differences on Iran, North Korea
Wide partisan gaps on threat from climate change, Russia; smaller differences on Iran, North Korea
Growing share say free trade agreements have been good for the U.S.
Fewer Americans view North Korea’s nuclear program, ISIS as ‘major threats’ than did so two years ago
Public widely views cyberattacks as a major threat to the United States
More Democrats say N. Korea is ‘not serious’ in addressing nuclear concerns
Stark partisan divisions over how to deal with Iran’s nuclear program
Far more Republicans than Democrats say Russia is ‘not much of a problem’
Republicans and Democrats had similar views of Russia – until Trump’s election
More Americans view China as an ‘adversary’ or a ‘serious problem’
Larger share favors building closer economic ties with China than in 2014
Republicans move in a more positive direction on free trade agreements
Partisans remain split over the impact of increased tariffs
Public would like Trump to focus more on domestic policy than foreign policy
Much larger share of Republicans say the U.S. is ‘more respected’ internationally than did so during Obama’s presidency or Bush’s second term
Republicans and Democrats had similar views of Russia – until Trump’s election
Republicans and Democrats had similar views of Russia – until Trump’s election
Partisans remain split over the impact of increased tariffs
Growing share say free trade agreements have been good for the U.S.
Growing share say free trade agreements have been good for the U.S.
Republicans and Democrats had similar views of Russia – until Trump’s election
Partisans remain split over the impact of increased tariffs-policy_0-12
Copyright 2019 Pew Research Center
About
Terms & Conditions
Privacy Policy
Reprints, Permissions & Use Policy
Feedback
Careers