MARKET RESEARCH & PUBLIC INTEREST SURVEYS

Since 2001, The FDU Poll has conducted survey research on issues of public importance. Utilizing best practices in survey methodology, The FDU Poll produces research that is conducted nationally and statewide. Findings from our surveys have been reported on numerous regional, national and international media outlets such as the New York Times, Washington Post, Wall Street Journal, Star-Ledger, as well as local and national broadcast media outlets. In addition, the Poll engages in research for corporate, non-profit, and government entities.

The FDU Poll is a charter member of the AAPOR Transparency Initiative. Membership requires the Poll to provide the public with information regarding how each poll is conducted and to provide additional information when asked.

search archived releases, 2001 to date

Selected Past Surveys

The FDU Poll, founded in 2000 as the PublicMind Poll, has carried out high quality and high -profile survey research in New Jersey and nationwide which has had an impact on both government policy and our academic conversation. Certain research from our past continues to attract significant attention from media outlets, the public, and researchers so we have provided links to those press releases here. All of our releases since 2001 are available via our release history page.

List of Topics

Political Knowledge

The Poll has run a number of studies assessing the political knowledge of the public in New Jersey, and across the country. Most models of representative democracy requires an informed electorate, so we believe that it is important to identify the factors that lead individuals to be better or worse informed about the structure of the US government, and the controversies driving the political debate of the moment.

Major findings in this area concern the importance of news sources in determining how much people know about politics, with sources like NPR tending to increase political knowledge above baseline expected levels, and ideological news sources, like Fox News, driving it below expected levels.

Threatened Masculinity

Gender identities, rather than just sex, are a major driver of their political and social views, and the Poll has been at the forefront of measuring gender – rather than just sex – and showing how men’s gender identities, in particular, relate to their attitudes and behaviors.

Our results in this area touch on how threatened masculinity leads men to be more supportive of Donald Trump, be more likely to get COVID-19, and “mansplain” to their relatives.

Conspiracy Theories

While widespread belief in unproven conspiracy theories has become a matter of widespread attention beginning with Donald Trump’s first run for the Presidency, the Poll has been assessing belief in various conspiracy theories for more than a decade. In that time, we have identified the major role of news sources in driving people to believe in political conspiracies, as well as the role of partisanship in leading people to believe things that they would like to be true, but aren’t.

Political Impact

While political polling gets the most attention, the highest function of public surveys is as a linking institution, letting people in power know what the public thinks and wants. Over the past decades, the Poll has been able to use this informative function to influence the results of major political matters here in New Jersey, by making sure that the voice of the people is heard in the halls of power.

The War on Christmas

Since 2013, the Poll has asked Americans about the purported War on Christmas: the idea that politicians are actively trying to take religious elements out of the winter holidays. In that time, we have seen enormous shifts in the proportion of the public that accepts the idea, and the composition of that group. In the past, belief was driven almost entirely by Fox News viewership and evangelical Christians. Today, Hispanic and Latino/a Americans are likely to think it’s true as well.

Gambling and Casinos

Since the legalization of casino gambling in Atlantic City, the expansion of gambling has been a hot button issue in New Jersey politics. As sports betting and casino gambling have become more prevalent in other states, that controversy has become national.

The Poll has charted the change – and, in New Jersey, the lack of change – in people’s views of sports betting, and gambling more generally.

Segregation and Integration

Contact Information
FDU Poll
publicmind@fdu.edu
973-443-8500