In just a couple of days it will be three years since the January 6 United States Capitol attack. At this time, and as we enter a new year, it feels apt to take a step back to try and capture an overview of the state of trust in institutions in the United States.
The following chart shows data collected by Gallup in June 2023. Of the institutions included in the survey, only the military and small businesses saw a great deal or a fair amount of trust in them from a majority of U.S. respondents. Congress, on the other hand, was trusted by only 8 percent of Americans.
The police saw an all-time low in the level of trust in them in 2023, with just 43 percent of respondents professing a great deal/quite a lot of trust, as did public schools with 26 percent (on par with 2014), large tech companies, also with 26 percent (on par with 2022) and big business with 14 percent (on par with 2022).
In 2022, public confidence declined in 11 out of the 16 institutions tracked by Gallup, with trust in the Supreme Court falling by 11 percentage points to 25 percent, and in the presidency by 15 percentage points to 23 percent. These hardly improved in 2023, rising to just 27 percent and 26 percent, respectively. However, these figures could well have changed by now as analysts at Gallup note: “the survey was conducted June 1-22, 2023, before the Supreme Court issued decisions affecting affirmative action in education, college loan forgiveness and LGBTQ+ Americans’ access to creative services.”