A January 2026 Pew Research Center survey of 5,111 US adults suggests that most Americans believe it’s important for the United States to be a world leader in science, but deep partisan differences exist in how Americans view the country’s global scientific standing and what role government should play in scientific research.
Most US adults agree that it is important for the United States to be a world leader in scientific achievement. More than half of both Republicans and Democrats say this goal is very important, and, overall, interest in the United States being a world leader in science has increased since 2023.
Changing attitudes since 2023
The public is divided on whether the United States is keeping pace with other countries in terms of scientific achievements. Roughly two-thirds of Democrats and those who lean Democratic (65%) say the United States is slipping behind other countries when it comes to science. That’s a 28-percentage point increase from two years ago, when Joe Biden was president.
Only about one-third of Republicans and those who lean Republican (32%) share that view, down 12 percentage points over the same period. Democrats are now 33 percentage points more likely than Republicans to say American science is falling behind. In 2023, this difference was inverted and much smaller: Democrats were 7 percentage points less likely to say America was losing ground in science.
Despite these different views, majorities of both parties believe government investment in science is worthwhile (84% overall), though Democrats (93%) are more likely than Republicans (76%) to say so. Republicans are also less likely to consider government investment essential, with 54% saying that private investment will ensure sufficient scientific progress.
Americans also differ in what they consider the strongest drivers of scientific progress. Democrats (71%) say colleges and universities are most likely to contribute a great deal or quite a bit to science. In contrast, Republicans (56%) say private companies contribute quite a bit to scientific progress.
The poll has a margin of error at the 95% confidence level of plus or minus 1.7 percentage points.
