###Embeddable###
###Embeddable###
###Embeddable###
###Embeddable###
###Embeddable###
###Embeddable###
###Embeddable###
###Embeddable###
###Embeddable###
###Embeddable###
###Embeddable###
###Embeddable###
###Embeddable###
###Embeddable###
###Embeddable###
###Embeddable###
###Embeddable###
###Embeddable###
###Embeddable###
###Embeddable###
###Embeddable###
###Embeddable###
###Embeddable###
###Embeddable###
Recommended
Americans' confidence in the police has increased eight points since last year, but average confidence across 14 U.S. institutions remains historically low.
None of the top elected or appointed officials in the federal government today earns even bare majority approval ratings from the American public, with the highest, 48%, earned by Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts.
A record-low 47% of Americans think the death penalty is fairly applied in the U.S., while a slim 53% majority continue to favor its use for convicted murderers.
Americans' approval of the Supreme Court and their trust in it remain low. The public is divided on whether its ideology is "about right" or "too conservative."
ºÚÁÏÍø /poll/4732/Supreme-Court.aspx
ºÚÁÏÍø World Headquarters, 901 F Street, Washington, D.C., 20001, U.S.A
+1 202.715.3030