Democratic men and women have similar preferences for what they want to see candidates discuss, though women were 10 percentage points more likely to prioritize gun policy, 67 percent to 57 percent — the party’s only double-digit gender gap on the 17 topics surveyed. (A total of 707 Democratic voters took the survey, which has a margin of error of 4 percentage points.)

The prominence of gun policy on the minds of Democratic voters mirrors its importance as a topic of discussion in a poll conducted earlier this year. Climate change has also weighed heavier on the nominating contest, reflected by a push among progressives for one debate to solely focus on what can be done to address global warming. And the issue of abortion rights has drawn the attention of candidates and voters as several states, such as Alabama, Georgia, Missouri and Louisiana, have enacted tough restrictions on reproductive health care access.

Discussion of slavery reparations has also cropped up in presidential candidates’ conversations, but it ranked at the bottom of the topics listed, with 25 percent saying it was very important to be discussed in the debate, the same share who want to hear the contenders discuss Trump’s proposed U.S.-Mexico border wall.