Americans' Pride in US History and Democracy Drops, and Fewer Are Proud to Be American, Polls Find
The survey found pride in democracy and the armed forces has fallen since 2017, with only 53% of adults saying they are very or extremely proud, Gallup said.
- The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research reports a broad decline in American pride, with public confidence in democracy falling 14 percentage points to 28% since February 2017.
- Falling positivity reflects a tumultuous period including President Donald Trump's first term, the COVID-19 pandemic, and economic inflation, which fueled backlash against President Joe Biden.
- Republicans are significantly more likely to express extreme pride, with 70% doing so compared to only 14% of Democrats, according to Gallup's new poll.
- Younger people are less likely to prioritize being American, compared to about three-quarters of Americans ages 60 and older who value their national identity highly.
- Among Black Americans, 73% say their race or ethnicity is extremely or very important to their identity, reflecting broader patterns where demographic identity increasingly supersedes national pride.
46 Articles
46 Articles
Americans' pride in US history and democracy dropped steeply over past decade, poll finds
Americans’ pride in their country's history or the way its democracy works has dropped noticeably over the past decade, according to a new poll from the Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.
Americans’ Pride Drops to New Low as 250th Anniversary Approaches
America will reach a historic milestone at the end of this week as it celebrates its semiquincentennial, but the people that comprise this storied nation have reportedly never felt so detached from its identity.An AP-NORC poll published Monday (but conducted in April) found that American pride has dropped significantly over the last decade. Negativity surrounding the government has also seeped into public perception of the core components of Ame…
Americans' pride in US history and democracy drops, and fewer are proud to be American, polls find
A new AP-NORC poll finds that Americans have grown less proud of the country’s history or the way its democracy works over the past several years.
Americans' pride in US history and democracy has fallen since 2017 and fewer are proud of being American, new polls find
Americans' pride in US history and democracy has fallen since 2017 and fewer are proud of being American, new polls find.
American National Pride Recedes Across Parties
Semafor: “One-third of US adults say they are ‘extremely proud’ to be an American, the lowest reading since Gallup started asking the question 25 years ago.” “In 2001, 55% of US adults reported being extremely proud to be an American. After 9/11, the figure shot up, reaching 70% in 2004. But partisan politics and anger towards Trump appears to be driving down the count of Americans feeling proud.”
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Bias Distribution
- 53% of the sources are Center
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