ABC News, NYT, Marquette, and CBS News Polled on Mass Deportations. It Will...
Did NYC's Communist Mayoral Candidate Just Get Busted Peddling a Race Hoax?
Abrego Garcia's El Salvador Prison Sob Story Just Imploded
Justice Department Drops the Hammer on White Supremacist Murder-for-Hire Plot
Brad Thor’s Edge of Honor: The Fictional Thriller That Feels One Headline Away
Feds Warn of the Biggest Threat to Independence Day Events
The End of Patriotism?
The Wannabe Political Assassins of Donald Trump
Independence Day Calls for the Governed to Protect Their 'Consent'
Trump Marks 4th of July With ‘America First’ Push: Foreign Tourists to Pay...
Adam Schiff's Post About the 4th of July Sure Was Something
Happy Independence Day!
Thank God 'Everything Moves Through Memphis:' A Tribute to Fred Smith
Let Us Be Proud Again: Why America Deserves Our Patriotism
Tipsheet

New Poll Shows How Many Americans Are Proud of Their National Identity

Helen H. Richardson/The Denver Post via AP

How many Americans are proud of their national identity? 

A new Gallup poll has the answers. 

In the poll released right before Independence Day, a record-low 58 percent of Americans expressed that they felt proud of their national identity. 

Advertisement

Last year, this figure was 67 percent. 

This is the lowest record ever recorded by Gallup.

This includes 41 percent of Americans who said they feel “extremely” proud of their national identity and those who said they feel “very” proud.

Republicans overwhelmingly expressed pride in their national identity, at 92 percent. 

Predictably, only 36 percent of Democrats said that they are proud to be American.

Sixty-three percent of men and fifty-five percent of women said that they are proud of their country. Broken down by age, only 36 percent of those ages 18 to 34, which encompasses Gen Z and Millennials, are proud of their national identity. 

Sixty percent of Americans ages 35 to 54 and 72 percent of Americans ages 55 and over are proud of their national identity.

Advertisement

“Each generation is less patriotic than the prior generation, and Gen Z is definitely much lower than anybody else,” said Jeffrey Jones, a senior editor at Gallup. “But even among the older generations, we see that they’re less patriotic than the ones before them, and they’ve become less patriotic over time. That’s primarily driven by Democrats within those generations.”

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement