Americans' fears of North Korea's nuclear program and the Islamic State have both fallen significantly in the past two years of Donald Trump's presidency.
A partisan gap is widening between what Democrat and Republican-leaning voters view as global threats in 2019, but a new survey shows Americans' fears of North Korea's nuclear program and the Islamic State have both fallen in the past two years of President Donald Trump's administration.
Climate change concerns have become the most widely divided issue along partisan lines under the Trump administration. Concerns about China's global power and influence have increased since 2017, with more than half, 54 percent, of Americans saying Beijing poses a major threat to the U.S. Sixty-two percent of respondents said the U.S. should build a stronger relationship with China via trade and economic policy. More than one-third of Americans said they want to get"tougher" with China.
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