Forty percent of Americans approve of the job the U.S. Supreme Court is doing, unchanged from the record low measured last fall.| Gallup.com
Americans' trust in the judicial branch has sunk further in the past year, and the Supreme Court's job approval rating is tied for the low in Gallup's trend.| Gallup.com
Forty percent of Americans approve of the job the U.S. Supreme Court is doing, down nine points since July and a new low approval rating in Gallup's trend.| Gallup.com
Most Americans would welcome a female or Hispanic nominee to the Supreme Court, but few see either as an essential characteristic of the next justice. Earlier polling found a slight preference for a justice who would make the court more conservative, but Americans also clearly prefer a justice who would not overturn the Roe v. Wade decision on abortion rights. Americans tend to believe the organized lobbying campaigns by liberal and conservative groups will do more harm than good to getting t...| Gallup.com
The Gallup Poll Social Series (GPSS) is the primary method Gallup uses to update several hundred long-term Gallup trend questions, some dating back to the 1930s. The GPSS is designed to monitor U.S. adults' views on numerous social, economic, and political topics.| Gallup.com