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Americans Say Government, Immigration Are Lead U.S. Woes
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Americans Say Government, Immigration Are Lead U.S. Woes

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Story Highlights

  • Nearly one in four Americans, 23%, name government as top problem
  • Roughly two in 10, 21%, see immigration as nation's major challenge
  • Far more Republicans than Democrats cite immigration

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- The government and immigration continue to stand apart from other issues when Americans are asked to name the most important problem facing the U.S. These two issues, mentioned in an April 1-9 poll by 23% and 21% of U.S. adults, respectively, are the only ones cited by more than one in 10 Americans, as they have been for all but one of the past 13 months.

Most Important U.S. Problem, April 2019
What do you think is the most important problem facing this country today?
U.S. adults
%
The government/Poor leadership 23
Immigration 21
Healthcare 7
Race relations/Racism 6
Economy in general 5
Poverty/Hunger/Homelessness 5
Unifying the country 5
Lack of respect for each other 4
Environment/Pollution/Climate change 3
Education 3
Ethics/Moral/Religious/Family decline 3
Federal budget deficit/Federal debt 2
Unemployment/Jobs 2
Gap between rich and poor 2
Crime/Violence 2
Judicial system/Courts/Laws 2
Problems mentioned by less than 2% of U.S. adults not shown
Gallup, April 1-9, 2019

The lone exception since April 2018 in double-digit mentions outside of government and immigration occurred last November, when 11% of Americans named healthcare at the same time that 18% mentioned government and 21% immigration.

Today, healthcare ranks a more distant third at 7%, followed by race relations or racism at 6%. Three issues -- the economy, poverty and unifying the country -- tie for fifth, all mentioned by 5%.

Another nine issues are mentioned by at least 2% of Americans, including the environment/pollution/climate change at 3%, unemployment at 2%, and the gap between rich and poor at 2%. The full list of responses is provided through a link at the end of this article.

Immigration Has Become a Steady Concern

Immigration is currently near the high point of its historical mentions in Gallup's trend -- the peak was 22% recorded last July, when separation of migrant families at the Southern U.S. border was making news. Mentions of immigration had started exceeding 10% routinely a few months earlier, in February 2018, but have averaged 17% since last August. By contrast, from 2001 through 2017, immigration mentions averaged about 5%.

At 23%, current mentions of government are down slightly from the 35% high mark recorded this past February, measured shortly after the conclusion of the longest government shutdown on record. Mentions of government have averaged 22% since President Donald Trump took office, versus 12% during the 12 months before that. Longer term, government has routinely been cited by more than 10% of Americans as the leading problem since President Barack Obama took office in 2009, including a surge to 33% during a government shutdown in 2013.

While government and immigration lead the list of public concerns today, it is worth noting that the extent of these concerns is nowhere near as great as the economy has been at times of economic distress. Fewer than 10% of Americans have named the economy/unemployment as the nation's leading problem since February 2018. However, that is a major change from the 2007-2009 recession and postrecession years, when these issues were often cited by more than 60%, as well as during and after the 2001 recession, when the combined figures rose to nearly 50%.

Line graph. High points for mentions of the economy as U.S. top problem far exceeded high points for government and immigrati

Republicans Mostly Focused on Immigration; Democrats, on Government

Understandably, Republicans and Democrats have differing perspectives on which problem is most important, but the starkest difference is seen for immigration. This month, 41% of Republicans consider immigration to be the top problem facing the country, contrasted with 18% of political independents and 5% of Democrats who say the same.

Conversely, by a narrower gap of 32% to 19%, Democrats are more likely than Republicans this month to see government as the top problem.

As 优蜜传媒has discussed previously, both parties have reason to consider the government the top problem, with a disproportionate share of Democrats citing Trump, while Republicans cite the Democrats or liberals in Congress. But a fair number of both party groups cite broader concerns about political corruption or gridlock.

Of the other top five problems mentioned as most important, healthcare and race relations/racism are more likely to be named by Democrats than Republicans. Combined economy or unemployment mentions are more likely to come from political independents than from either party group.

Bar graph. Top 5 U.S. problems, April 2019, by party. Immigration is top problem for Republicans; government for Democrats.

Bottom Line

At a time when the economy is fairly strong and the U.S. is not involved in any major wars, it is to be expected that no single issue dominates Americans' thinking in terms of national problems. Today, the government and immigration consistently lead, but neither prevails in the way the economy did during the last recession and postrecession periods, or as the Korean War did in the 1950s, the Vietnam War did in the 1960s, or inflation did in the 1970s. The roughly one-fifth to one-quarter mentions that today's top problems receive is more consistent with the level seen for healthcare at its peak of concern in 2009-2010.

Although immigration is not an overriding concern for Americans generally, it is a major concern of Republicans -- mirroring the high priority Republican President Trump has given the issue. While this highlights the difficulty of finding a bipartisan solution to the various aspects of the issue, it also suggests immigration will be an important election issue for Republicans, and one the president and GOP will attempt to use to drive turnout and support for Trump in 2020.

View complete question responses and trends.

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