📊 Data & Stats Hub

Visual breakdowns of the news through charts, infographics, and polling data. We believe numbers can tell powerful stories—this page helps you see the bigger picture.

Table of Contents

Job Poll📊 Data & Stats Hub

Congress Poll 📊 Data & Stats Hub

Leaders Favorability 📊 Data & Stats Hub

Harvard Youth Poll 📊 Data & Stats Hub

Ukraine Poll 📊 Data & Stats Hub

Yale Youth Poll 📊 Data & Stats Hub

President Trump Job Approval

We can see in this poll here by RealClear Polling the job approval rating of Trump so far. According to this poll, 51.1% disapprove of Trump’s job so far, and 45.1% of people approve of it. On the page linked below, we can see some polling data from various pollsters and some graphs depicting the polling data so far.

https://www.realclearpolling.com/polls/approval/donald-trump/approval-rating

Congressional Job Approval

We can see in this poll here by RealClear Polling the job approval rating of Congress so far. According to this poll, 60% disapprove of Congress’s job so far, and 28.5% of people approve of it. On the page linked below, we can see some polling data from various pollsters and some graphs depicting the polling data so far.

https://www.realclearpolling.com/polls/approval/congressional/approval-rating

Favorability Ratings: Political Leaders

In this poll here, wee see the favorability ratings of various political leaders. Trump’s favorable/unfavorable rating is 45.4/51.2. J.D. Vance’s favorable/unfavorable rating is 41.8/46.9. Mike Johnson’s favorable/unfavorable rating is 30.3/36.2. Hakeem Jeffries’ favorable/unfavorable rating is 29.4/28.4. John Thune’s favorable/unfavorable rating is 18.9/24.6. Chuck Schumer’s favorable/unfavorable rating is 28.0/45.7.

https://www.realclearpolling.com/polls/favorability/political-leaders

Harvard Youth Poll

Linked here, we can see the Harvard Youth Poll from the Institute of Politics at Harvard Kennedy School.

We can see some of these key findings from the data.

  • More than 4 in 10 young Americans under 30 say they’re “barely getting by” financially, while just 16% report doing well or very well;
  • Fewer than half feel a sense of community, with only 17% reporting deep social connection;
  • Just 15% believe the country is heading in the right direction, and fewer than one-third approve of President Trump or either party in Congress;
  • Traditional life goals are shifting, with only 48% of young Americans saying having children is important;
  • Young people who became socially isolated during COVID report higher rates of depression, especially those who were entering high school or college during the pandemic;
  • Support for U.S. involvement abroad remains low—and sharply divided by party;
  • Only 19% trust the federal government to do the right thing most or all the time.

We can see various graphic and data in the poll linked

https://iop.harvard.edu/youth-poll/50th-edition-spring-2025

March 2025 National Poll: US Voters See No Clear Winner From Zelenskyy-Trump Meeting, Plurality Oppose US Withdrawal from NATO

In this poll here, we can see people’s views on Ukraine and NATO.

When asked about the future of Ukraine, 55% think it is most likely that Ukraine will give up some land to Russia but remain an independent country, 29% think it will be a completely independent country within its original borders, and 17% think Ukraine will become part of Russia. 

A plurality of voters (48%) oppose the US exiting the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), while 28% support withdrawing. A quarter (25%) are neutral or have no opinion.

  • 66% of Democrats and 50% of independents oppose the US withdrawing from NATO, while 47% of Republicans support a US withdrawal.

Voters were asked how likely they think it is that a world war breaks out in the next four years. Fifty-five percent think it is very likely or somewhat likely, while 45% think it is not very likely or not at all likely. 

Spring 2025 Poll

In this poll here, we can see the [r]esults and takeaways from the Spring 2025 edition of the Yale Youth Poll.

The Yale Youth Poll, an undergraduate-led research project at Yale University, today released a new poll of young American voters (aged 18-29) and the general population. The poll sampled 4,100 self-reported registered voters, including 2,025 voters aged 18-29, enabling a comparison of young voters to the electorate as a whole. 

The survey included a range of questions on subjects from higher education to immigration to what the federal budget is spent on. The poll also implemented two A/B tests to gauge the effect of framing progressive policies as “human rights” and whether providing voters with basic information about government finances changes their views on the federal deficit, tax rates, and spending levels. The first message test found that arguing for progressive policies on homelessness on the grounds of  “human rights” reduced support for the progressive position by 22 points. 

The widest generational divides appeared on immigration and protest rights. While voters overall opposed allowing asylum seekers who enter the country illegally to stay by a 2-point margin, young voters supported allowing them to remain by a 25-point margin. On the question of whether international students should be deported for protesting the war in Gaza, voters overall opposed deportation by 36 points, while young voters opposed deportation by 65 points.

Voters under 30 were nearly split on whether teens aged 13 to 17 should be allowed access to gender transition treatments, opposing it by just a 0.1-point margin in comparison to the broader electorate, which opposed it by 24 points. They also differed on campus speech, with young voters supporting universities making political or social statements by a 6-point margin, while the broader electorate opposed such statements by a 13-point margin. 

Young voters’ views on institutional trust and democratic reform followed a similar pattern. Young voters were more likely to say the Supreme Court rules based on ideology or partisanship rather than legal reasoning, whereas voters overall saw the Supreme Court as ruling based on the legal merits of cases.

Finally, [the] data uncovered an interesting divide within under–30s as a cohort:  When asked whether they would vote for the Democratic or Republican candidate in the 2026 congressional elections in their district, voters aged 22–29 favored the Democratic candidate by a margin of 6.4 points, but voters aged 18–21 favored the Republican by a margin of 11.7 points. 

https://youthpoll.yale.edu/spring-2025-results

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