A recent survey offers a look at how experts think a Trump or Harris victory will impact US foreign policy moving forward.
Craig Kafura offers his take on how both a Trump or Harris administration might approach US-Taiwan policy.
"Participants ranked the country 26 out of 100 on the Council’s 0–100 feeling thermometer, which dropped China 32 spots from its 2022 position," The Hill's Ashleigh Fields writes.
A majority now say the United States should work to actively limit the growth of China's power, Council polling finds.
Council polling finds support for Trump’s border wall and use of troops, but wide opposition to his mass-deportation proposal.
Views on immigration levels, pathways to citizenship, and more differ across various racial and ethnic subgroups of Americans.
Asian Americans are far more likely to support US intervention on behalf of Taipei in the case of a Chinese invasion.
Asian Americans are less likely than other racial or ethnic groups to say China’s rise is a “critical” threat to the United States.
Independents who lean toward neither party could play a decisive role in the 2024 presidential election.
New Council-Ipsos polling reveals there is little common ground to be found between the right and left when it comes to immigration policy solutions.
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