Public Stays with Health Care, Media Focuses on Terror

The public and the media went their own ways on the news last week. The media kept up heavy coverage of the aftermath of the attempt to blow up a Detroit-bound jet on Christmas Day, while the public focused most closely on the health care debate in Washington.

About a quarter (26%) of Americans say the debate over health care reform was the story they followed most closely, while 17% say they followed news about the government's response to the attempted terror attack on a Northwest Airlines jet more closely than any other major story. By another measure, the percentage of Americans saying they followed the government's response to the failed terror attack "very closely" rivals interest in the other major stories of the week: 37% say they followed this story very closely. Just more than four-in-ten (42%) say they followed news about the harsh winter weather very closely, while 39% each say the same about the economy and the health care debate, according to the latest News Interest Index survey conducted Jan. 8-11 among 1,043 adults nationwide by the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press.


Public Stays with Health Care, Media Focuses on Terror