
A vast majority of Americans approve of the idea of engaging countries abroad to address the causes of migration before it happens, according to a new nationwide Civiqs poll.

A portion of those who are hesitant will eventually get vaccinated. According the polling firm Civiqs, fewer people are unsure about the vaccines now than in the fall, but the percentage of hard noes has remained fairly constant.

Reluctance to get vaccinated is concentrated among young conservatives, who are skeptical of the pandemic’s harms. Roughly three-quarters of Republican men ages 18 to 49 are “not concerned at all” about a coronavirus outbreak, according to Civiqs polling.

In the almost four years Civiqs has been asking about support for the Black Lives Matter movement, a majority of white people have never supported the movement. Support peaked at 43 percent last June, just days after George Floyd’s death.

The April 2021 Daily Kos/Civiqs Poll asked 1,541 registered voters in the United States about the American Rescue Plan, COVID-19, vaccinations, student loan forgiveness, infrastructure, and more.

In a Civiqs survey of registered voters, respondents were asked if they planned to get a vaccine. A whopping 41 percent of White, male Republicans responded “no.” By contrast, only 2 percent of White male Democrats said they wouldn’t get a vaccine.

The March 2021 Daily Kos/Civiqs Poll asked 1,673 registered voters in the United States about the American Rescue Plan, Joe Biden’s presidency so far, interest in voting for third parties, the coronavirus vaccine, daylight saving time, student debt relief, and more.

Three months into the COVID-19 vaccine rollout in the US, rates of vaccine acceptance have steadily climbed for Black and Latinx Americans but stayed low among white Republicans, according to recent polling by Civiqs.

Despite the much-covered issue of Black Americans questioning the coronavirus vaccine, a recent poll by Civiqs found that white Americans--and white Republicans especially--are now far more likely to say they will not take a vaccine.

Two-thirds of Republicans under 30 without a college degree say they are “not concerned at all” about COVID-19, according to polling from Civiqs. The same percentage of this group says they won’t take the vaccine, making them the most vaccine-resistant cohort.