March 27, 2025

Polling

Newsweek - A 1,000-person survey conducted by Clever Real Estate published this week found that 26 percent of Americans feel better off than in September, with only a third (34 percent) expecting a better financial situation six months from now.

Sixty-three percent of those surveyed, meanwhile, believe the government is not doing enough to address key economic issues, which they single out as rising insurance costs (95 percent), inflation (94 percent) and the general state of the economy (89 percent).

The poll also revealed that nearly three-quarters (74 percent) of Americans believe inflation will worsen over the next year, with 70 percent expressing greater concern about inflation now than in September and only 39 approving of Trump's approach to managing it. 

Newsweek - Polling conducted by YouGov on March 25 suggested that Americans were more concerned about the Trump administration officials' use of an unclassified messaging app than they were about Clinton's use of a private email server.

The poll, which surveyed 5,976 U.S. adults, found that 74 percent of respondents said the use of Signal by government officials to discuss airstrikes was "somewhat serious" or "very serious." While 21 percent described it as "somewhat serious," 53 percent said it was "very serious."

Among Republicans, 60 percent said they believed the Trump administration's military leak was a "very" or "somewhat serious" problem. So did 89 percent of Democrats and 72 percent of independents. The poll had a margin of error of plus or minus 2 percentage points.

Polling conducted by YouGov and The Economist in March 2015 found that 30 percent of Americans believed Clinton's private email server was a "very serious" problem, while 26 percent believed it was "somewhat serious." In September of that year, the pollsters asked the same question, and 38 percent said the issue was "very serious," while 22 percent said it was "somewhat serious."


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