Gallup polls - end of year review...
Revisiting the most defining findings of 2010
by Lymari Morales
January
• President Barack Obama begins his second year as president with 50% of Americans approving of his job performance, having finished his first year with most polarized ratings in Gallup history.
• Following Republican Scott Brown's election to the U.S. Senate, 55% of American favor Congress' halting current healthcare reform efforts and considering other alternatives.
• The vast majority of Americans think it will be at least two years before the U.S. economy starts to recover.
• Haitians' attitudes reveal widespread vulnerability in the wake of a devastating 7.0 magnitude earthquake.
February
• Gallup's party identification data by state shows that despite GOP gains, most states remain blue.
• Gallup's new daily measure of U.S. employment reveals the underemployed spending 36% less than the employed.
• Hawaii tops Utah as the U.S. state with the highest overall wellbeing.
• Gallup's worldwide research reveals that those with links to family or friends abroad are the most likely to say they would like to migrate permanently.
March
• President Obama's job approval rating falls to its lowest yet amid healthcare debate, but recovers to 51% after the legislation passes.
• More Americans support than oppose Congress' passage of healthcare legislation.
• A new high of 48% of Americans say they view the seriousness of global warming as generally exaggerated.
• The Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index reveals that residents of the nation's most obese metro areas engage in fewer healthy behaviors and have worse physical health.
• As Greece struggles financially, Gallup Eurobarometer surveys reveal that Greeks are the most likely in the EU to say they struggle paying their bills.
April
• Republicans move ahead of Democrats in voters' 2010 election preferences for the first time.
• Twenty-eight percent of Americans call themselves supporters of the Tea Party movement.
• Gallup tracking shows signs of economic improvement across separate measures of employment, job creation, consumer spending, and economic confidence.
• The Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index finds higher rates of cancer among those who have also been diagnosed with high blood pressure, high cholesterol, or diabetes.
• More Americans favor than oppose Arizona's new immigration law.
• Americans place a higher priority on energy production over environmental protection for the first time.
May
• Gallup tracking finds the U.S. federal government outpacing the private sector in job creation.
• Americans' acceptance of gay relations crosses the 50% threshold for the first time.
• The 2009-2010 flu season closes with cold and flu rates far below the previous year.
• Gallup finds Colombians reporting more murders of close friends or family than those in most Latin American countries surveyed.
June
• Americans name federal debt and terrorism as the most serious threats to the future wellbeing of the country.
• U.S. voters say a candidate's stance on national issues matter more to their vote for Congress than what they can do locally, by the widest margin in Gallup history.
• Upper-income consumers show some frugality fatigue, spending more in May than in any month since January 2009.
• Renewed positivity sends the U.S. Well-Being Index to a new high.
• Gallup finds roughly 6.2 million Mexicans would move permanently to the U.S. if they had the chance.
July
• Congress ranks last in Gallup's annual confidence in institutions poll, with a record-low 11% saying they have a great deal or quite a lot of confidence.
• President Obama's job approval rating falls to 38% among independents.
• The U.S. drinking rate edges up slightly to a 25-year high.
• Gallup finds high home Internet access across several regions of the globe.
August
• Blacks and whites continue to differ sharply on President Obama's job performance.
• Elena Kagan is confirmed to the U.S. Supreme Court, with 46% of Americans in favor, the lowest level of support for a recent successful nominee.
• Republicans take an unprecedented 10-point lead on Gallup's generic ballot for Congress.
• Americans are evenly divided about whether the federal government should maintain a moratorium on most offshore oil drilling in the Gulf following the BP oil spill.
• The Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index reveals that wellbeing declines as commute times increase.
• Gallup finds that the population of some countries would double or even triple if all adults worldwide who wanted to migrate permanently moved where they would like.
September
• Americans give Republicans the edge on most election issues as the midterm congressional elections approach.
• The financial reform bill is the only one of five major pieces of legislation passed by Congress in the past two years that a majority of Americans support.
• Americans' distrust in the media to report the news fully, accurately, and fairly edges up to a record high.
• Gallup finds Gulf Coast-facing counties experiencing a decline in overall wellbeing and an increase in diagnoses of depression in the 15 weeks following the BP oil spill.
• Gallup's global surveys reveal that religiosity is highest in the world's poorest nations.
October
• The 2010 electorate heading into the midterm elections looks more Republican than in the past.
• "Too big," "confused," and "corrupt" are the words Americans most often use to describe the federal government.
• Unemployment, as measured by Gallup, jumped sharply to 10.1% in September.
• The Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index documents that very religious Americans have higher wellbeing than those who are moderately religious or not religious.
• Gallup's global surveys document that worldwide, financial comfort grows more important with age.
November
• Americans express record-high levels of enthusiasm about voting in the midterm congressional elections in which Republicans are poised to win big.
• No clear front-runner emerges for the Republican presidential nomination in 2012.
• Gallup's Job Creation Index finds larger U.S. companies while smaller businesses shed jobs.
• The Gallup-Healthway Well-Being Index marks one million surveys, revealing an unprecedented level of detail about Americans' wellbeing and health.
• As U.K. Prime Minister David Cameron announces his desire to track his citizens' wellbeing, Gallup reveals that Britons' wellbeing held largely steady during recent years of economic turmoil.
December
• As Congress debates a compromise deal to extend the Bush tax cuts to all Americans and to extend unemployment benefits, 66% of Americans express support for each idea.
• Congress' job approval rating declines to 13%, the worst in Gallup history.
• Americans name Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton as the most admired man and woman of the year.
• Consumer spending in the East and Midwest drops sharply after Christmas following a crippling blizzard, while the West and South largely maintain at pre-Christmas levels.
• A new low of 44.8% of Americans get their healthcare coverage from their employer.
• Gallup global surveys reveal that a median of 31% of world citizens have at some point in the last year struggled to afford adequate shelter or housing.
• Survey Methods
• Gallup surveys 1,000 national adults, aged 18 and older, every day and also conducts additional surveys. In most cases, the maximum margin of sampling error is ±2 to ±4 percentage points.
• Interviews are conducted with respondents on land-line telephones (for respondents with a land-line telephone) and cellular phones (for respondents who are cell-phone only).
• In addition to sampling error, question wording and practical difficulties in conducting surveys can introduce error or bias into the findings of public opinion polls.

<< Home