Americans Name Government
as No. 1 U.S. Problem
By Justin McCarthy
March 12, 2015 "ICH"
- "Gallup"
- WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Americans continue to
name the government (18%) as the most
important U.S. problem, a distinction it has
had for the past four months. Americans'
mentions of the economy as the top problem
(11%) dropped this month, leaving it tied
with jobs (10%) for second place.
Though issues such as
terrorism,
healthcare,
race relations and
immigration have emerged among the top
problems in recent polls, government, the
economy and unemployment have been the
dominant problems listed by Americans for
more than a year.
The latest results are
from a March 5-8 Gallup poll of 1,025
American adults.
While the ranking of the
top two problems is similar to what Gallup
found in February, mentions of the economy
dropped from 16% to the current 11%. In a
separate measure, Americans' confidence in
the economy had been
dipping further into negative territory
in late February and early March, but has
been
improving in recent days.
The state of U.S.
healthcare also became less of a problem to
Americans in March, as 7% mention it this
month, compared with 10% in February.
The latest poll found that
terrorism (6%), the situation in Iraq/ISIS
(4%) and national security (4%) also ranked
among the most cited problems, illustrating
that terrorism concerns are still on many
Americans' minds.
Satisfaction With
Direction of U.S. at 31%
Thirty-one percent of
Americans are satisfied with the way things
are going in the country. Satisfaction has
been stable over the last three months;
however, it remains higher than most
readings since 2007.
Satisfaction with the
nation's direction had declined in 2013 and
2014 after reaching 33% during the 2012 fall
presidential campaign. Satisfaction reached
an all-time low of 7% in late 2008 as the
financial crisis was underway, and an
all-time high of 71% in February 1999 amid
the dot-com boom.
Bottom Line
While dissatisfaction with
government is by no means a new issue to the
American people, it has not in recent months
been as clearly the leading problem as it is
now, given that fewer Americans mention the
economy.
Meanwhile, satisfaction
with the direction of the U.S. remains
relatively upbeat compared with figures from
recent years, but two-thirds of Americans
continue to be dissatisfied.
Survey Methods
Results for this Gallup
poll are based on telephone interviews
conducted March 5-8, 2015, with a random
sample of 1,025 adults, aged 18 and older,
living in all 50 U.S. states and the
District of Columbia. For results based on
the total sample of national adults, the
margin of sampling error is ±4 percentage
points at the 95% confidence level. All
reported margins of sampling error include
computed design effects for weighting.
Each sample of national
adults includes a minimum quota of 50%
cellphone respondents and 50% landline
respondents, with additional minimum quotas
by time zone within region. Landline and
cellular telephone numbers are selected
using random-digit-dial methods.
View survey methodology,
complete question responses, and trends.