海角大神

海角大神 / Text

Poll: Most Americans think things are going pretty well in the US

A new CNN/ORC poll finds consistent improvement in the mood of the nation over the past few months, despite a series of national security crises and continued gridlock in Washington.

By Brad Knickerbocker, Staff writer

Maybe it鈥檚 Thanksgiving good feelings, but most Americans seem to think things are going pretty well in the US, according to a new poll.

True, it鈥檚 just a slight margin in the direction of positive perceptions, but a CNN/ORC poll conducted the weekend before Thanksgiving finds that for the first time in seven years, 鈥渁 majority of Americans think things are going well in the nation.鈥

鈥淚t's a slim majority 鈥 just 52 percent of Americans said things are going well, while 48 percent said things are going badly 鈥 but it's the most positive appraisal of the state of the nation that the poll has found since January of 2007,鈥 CNN reports. 鈥淎nd it marks consistent improvement in the mood of the nation over the past few months, despite a series of national security crises and continued gridlock in Washington.鈥 The number ticked upward from 50 percent in September.

Similarly, Gallup sees the gap between Americans who see themselves as 鈥渢hriving鈥 and those who say they鈥檙e 鈥渟truggling鈥 as widening in a positive direction (56-41 percent this past week). Three months earlier, the gap was narrower (51-44 percent).

One example here: 鈥淔ewer Americans say they are struggling to afford food now than did so during the depths of the recession. On average, 17.2 percent of U.S. adults so far in 2014 report that in the last 12 months they have struggled to afford food for themselves or their families. This percentage is on track to be the lowest measured since the Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index started in 2008.鈥

Gallup also finds that its Economic Confidence Index, which averages both American's views of current economic conditions and whether they think the economy will get better or will get worse, 鈥渞emains one of the most positive weekly averages since Gallup began tracking economic confidence daily in 2008.鈥

Still, it鈥檚 not all sweetness and light, according to Gallup.

Sixty-three percent of those polled believe there is more crime in the US than there was a year ago, and 37 percent say they don鈥檛 feel safe walking near home at night.

And of course there鈥檚 the national political divide which has intensified in tone as it grows wider.

鈥淭here is nothing new about Republicans disliking the Democratic Party or, conversely, Democrats not liking the GOP. But the level of antipathy that members of each party feel toward the opposing party has surged over the past two decades,鈥 the Pew Research Center reported in June. 鈥淣ot only do greater numbers of those in both parties have negative views of the other side, those negative views are increasingly intense. And today, many go so far as to say that the opposing party鈥檚 policies threaten the nation鈥檚 well-being.鈥

Breaking apart that new CNN/ORC poll reveals interesting statistics, including a gender and geographic divide, reports CNN:

But if you鈥檙e looking for a scrap of good news to be grateful for this Thanksgiving weekend, that new CNN/ORC poll about public attitudes regarding individual well-being may just provide it.