Biden supporters in states where it is hardest to vote by mail are most concerned about voting this fall
About six-in-ten registered voters in the five U.S. states where elections are conducted entirely by mail expect voting to be easy.
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About six-in-ten registered voters in the five U.S. states where elections are conducted entirely by mail expect voting to be easy.
Americans are now more likely to expect foreign election interference than they were in October 2018, when 67% expected it.
With less than three months until Election Day, Joe Biden has an advantage over Donald Trump among registered voters. But support for Trump is much stronger.
65% of Americans say the option to vote early or absentee should be available to any voter without requiring a documented reason.
The share of Americans voting by mail has risen in recent presidential election cycles, but there is variation from one state to another.
Overall, 70% of U.S. adults favor allowing any voter to vote by mail if they want to.
Nearly seven-in-ten registered voters say postponing state primary elections has been a necessary step to address the coronavirus outbreak.
40% of U.S. adults prefer to keep the current system in which the candidate who receives the most Electoral College vote wins the election.
Democrats are much more likely than Republicans to consider efforts by foreign nations to influence the election to be a “major problem.”
Americans who closely follow political news are more likely to have confidence that the public will accept election results. And that’s true across party boundaries.
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