Do Canadians and Americans still trust others in this age in political polarization?
Today we live in a time of social and political fracture. Much of what people know and how they communicate with others is happening on social media that channels content through narrow audiences, and feeds conflict and outrage. In the US, politics is now dividing Americans more than at any time since that country’s Civil War more than 150 years ago. In Canada, such divisions are much less sharp yet the political rhetoric is heating up at the federal level and in some provinces like Alberta. Immigration – long an issue on which there was a normative consensus – is now becoming a wedge issue.
All this suggests we may be witnessing a fundamental breakdown in the social glue that holds our society together. Amidst the noise of heated political rhetoric and ranting Tik Tok videos, are we losing trust in each other?
One way to answer this question is through public opinion research that measures social trust in the population over time. The AmericasBarometer is such a project that encompasses population surveys on democracy, governance and civic engagement in 20 plus countries spanning the western hemisphere, conducted biennially since 2006. Our focus here is on results from the most recent survey in Canada and the USA (conducted in July – September 2025) and how opinions on social trust have changed or not over the past decade.
Survey Details
The AmericasBarometer is a regular comparative survey of democratic values and behaviours that covers countries in North, Central and South America, as well as a significant number of countries in the Caribbean (the 2025-26 study will cover 20 countries). The project is led by the LAPOP Lab at Vanderbilt University’s Center for Global Democracy (CGD). The Canadian survey was conducted by the Environics Institute for Survey Research, in partnership with CGD’s LAPOP Lab at Vanderbilt University and with the support of the Max Bell Foundation.
The survey was conducted online with a sample of 3,550 Canadians (aged 18 and over) between July 30 and August 7, 2025. The results are weighted by region, age, gender, education and language so as to be fully representative of the Canadian population.
The AmericasBarometer surveys measure trust in a range of political institutions and actors on a seven-point scale. Here is a summary of the most recent results for Canada, showing the trend since 2010.
More from this Series
Attitudes toward social inequality in Canada and the USA
March 30, 2026
Public support for autocratic leaders in Canada and the USA
February 23, 2026
Related reading
Social norms and racism in Canada
A new national research project documents for the first time the social norms that govern how Canadians think about and act on different types of racial micro-aggressive actions directed at people who are Indigenous or Black.
June 22, 2022Reportracism,public opinion research,social change,government role,lived experience,discrimination
Public Opinion About Canada-USA Relations
Canada and the United States have enjoyed a strong relationship for more than a century. There have been ups and downs depending on the respective leaders in each country, but underneath remained a solid foundation of trust and partnership.
June 6, 2025Reportfocus canada,politics,united states politics
Wealth inequality in Canada and the USA
Income inequality is patently visible in today’s society. To what extent does the public look to their governments to act to narrow the gap between rich and poor, and how have such expectations changed over the past decade or so?
February 4, 2026Reporteconomy,united states,americasbarometer,income inequality





