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Public opinion of same-sex marriage in the United States

Public opinion of same-sex marriage in the United States has significantly changed since the 1990s,[2] and an overwhelming majority of Americans now favor same-sex marriage.[3]

Degree of public support for same-sex marriage by state in 2022:[1]
   80–83%
   70–79%
   60–69%
   50–59%
   49% (plurality support)

Approval of same-sex marriage is higher in younger generations;[4] among 18–34 year olds, support is near-universal.[5] From 1988 to 2009, support for recognized same-sex marriage increased between 1% and 1.5% per year, and accelerated thereafter,[6] rising above 50% in Pew Research Center polling for the first time in 2011.[7] A 2022 Public Religion Research Institute poll found that a majority of people in every state support same-sex marriage except in Mississippi, where there is plurality support.[8]

A 2023 New York Times/Siena poll found that 70% of Americans support same-sex marriage and 22% oppose it.[9] Garretson (2018) writes: "The transformation of America's response to homosexuality has been — and continues to be — one of the most rapid and sustained shifts in mass attitudes since the start of public polling."[2]

Overview Edit

Public opinion of same-sex marriage in the United States has changed radically since polling of the American people regarding the issue was first conducted in 1988.[10] The issue of same-sex marriage was not brought up as an issue for public debate until at least the 1950s[11] and was not a political issue until the 1970s.[12] According to statistician Nate Silver of the poll aggregator FiveThirtyEight, from 1988 to April 2009, support for same-sex marriage increased between 1% and 1.5% per year and about 4% from April 2009 to August 2010.[13] A Pew Research Center poll, conducted from May 21, 2008, to May 25, 2008, found that, for the first time, a majority of Americans did not oppose same-sex marriage, with opposition having fallen to 49%.[14] An ABC News/Washington Post poll, conducted from April 21, 2009, to April 24, 2009, found that, for the first time, a plurality of Americans supported same-sex marriage at 49% and that a majority of Americans supported the marriages of same-sex couples validly entered into in one state being recognized in all states at 53%.[15] A CNN/Opinion Research poll, conducted from August 6, 2010, to August 10, 2010, found that, for the first time, a majority of Americans supported same-sex marriage at 52%.[16] A Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research poll, conducted from January 25, 2015 to January 31, 2015, found that, for the first time, 60% of Americans supported same-sex marriage.[17]

Continual polling by Gallup over the course of more than two decades has shown that support for same-sex marriage has grown rapidly, while opposition has simultaneously collapsed. In 1996, 68% of Americans opposed same-sex marriage, while only 27% supported. In 2018, 67% of Americans supported same-sex marriage, while only 31% opposed.[18] As of 2018, 60% of Americans said they would not mind if their child married someone of the same gender.[19]

National polls Edit

Since Obergefell v. Hodges Edit

2020–present Edit

A 2023 New York Times/Siena poll found that 70% of Americans supported same-sex marriage, while 22% opposed it.[9]

A 2023 Gallup poll found that 71% of Americans supported same-sex marriage, while 28% opposed it.[20][21]

According to The Nation, a private poll conducted by Centerline Action before the passage of the Respect for Marriage Act in late 2022 found that 73 percent of Americans support same-sex marriage; the percentage of Americans opposed to same-sex marriage was not listed.[22]

A December 2022 Quinnipiac University poll found that 68% of Americans supported same-sex marriage, while 22 percent opposed it.[23]

A September 2022 Grinnell College National Poll found that 74% of Americans believe same-sex marriage should be a guaranteed right while 13% disagreed and 13% were uncertain.[24][25]

A May 2022 Gallup poll found that 71% of Americans supported same-sex marriage, while 28% were against.[21][26]

The 2022 American Values Atlas by Public Religion Research Institute found that 69% of Americans supported same-sex marriage, while 28% opposed it.[8]

A June 2021 CBS News/YouGov poll found that 64% of Americans supported same-sex marriage while 36% were opposed. Two-thirds of Republicans over age 45 are opposed, but the opinions of Republicans under age 45 are almost evenly split with 52% oppose and 48% support same sex marriage.[27]

An 2021 Public Religion Research Institute poll found that 67% of Americans supported same-sex marriage, while 32% were opposed.[3]

A June 2021 Gallup poll found that 70% of Americans supported same-sex marriage and 29% were against.[28]

A June 2020 Gallup poll found that 67% of Americans supported same sex marriage, while 31% were against, matching their May 2018 record high.

A Public Religion Research Institute nationwide & state-by-state poll conducted in 2020 found that 67% of Americans supported same-sex marriage, 27% opposed, and 5% refused to answer or answered "don't know," with there being majority support for same-sex marriage in 46 states, and plurality support in 4 states.[1]

A 2020 American National Election Studies poll found that 66% of Americans supported legal recognition of same-sex marriage, 20% supported civil unions, while 14% of Americans were opposed to any legal recognition of same-sex relationships.[29]

2016–2019 Edit

A June 2019 CBS News poll found that 67% of Americans supported same-sex marriage, while 28% were against.[30]

A June 2019 IPSOS/Reuters poll found that 58% of Americans supported same-sex marriage, while 28% were against.[31]

A May 2019 Pew Research Center poll found 61% of Americans supported same-sex marriage while 31% were against.[32]

A May 2019 Gallup poll found that 63% of Americans supported same sex marriage, with 36% opposing it. While this is a drop when compared to 2018, same sex marriage approval still remains stable.[33]

A May 2018 Gallup poll found that 67% of Americans supported same-sex marriage, 31% opposed, and 2% had no opinion.[18]

An April 2018 NBC News poll found that 64% of Americans supported same-sex marriage, 33% opposed, and 3% had no opinion.[34] The poll was reported by NBC News as notable as it found that 55% of Southerners supported same-sex marriage, which represented an historic change for a region that was previously staunchly opposed.[35]

A Public Religion Research Institute nationwide & state-by-state poll conducted throughout 2017 found that 61% of Americans supported same-sex marriage, 30% opposed, and 9% refused to answer or answered "don't know," with there being majority support for same-sex marriage in 44 states, plurality support in 4 states, plurality opposition in 1 state, and majority opposition in 1 state.[36]

An August 2017 NBC News/The Wall Street Journal poll found that 60% of Americans supported same-sex marriage, 33% opposed, and 7% had no opinion.[37][38]

A June 2017 Pew Research Center poll found 62% of Americans supported same-sex marriage, 32% opposed, and 6% had no opinion. This marked the first Pew poll where a majority of Baby Boomers supported same-sex marriage, did not oppose same-sex marriage.[39]

A May 2017 Gallup poll found 64% of Americans supported same-sex marriage, 34% opposed, and 2% had no opinion. This marked the first Gallup poll where a majority of Protestants supported same-sex marriage.[40]

A May 2016 Gallup poll found 61% of Americans supported same-sex marriage, 37% opposed, and 2% had no opinion. This marked the first Gallup poll where a majority of Americans aged 65 and older supported same-sex marriage.[41]

Before Obergefell v. Hodges Edit

2010–2015 Edit

2015 Edit

A May Gallup poll found 60% of Americans supported same-sex marriage, 37% opposed, and 3% had no opinion.[42]

A February–March Wall Street Journal poll found that 59% of Americans favored same-sex marriage.[43]

A January–February Human Rights Campaign poll found that 60% of Americans favored same-sex marriage, while 37% opposed. The same poll also found that 46% of respondents knew a same-sex couple who had gotten married.[17]

A February 12–15 CNN/ORC poll found that 63% of Americans believed same-sex marriage is a constitutional right, while 36% disagreed.[44]

2014 Edit

A May Gallup poll found that 55% of Americans supported same-sex marriage, 42% opposed, and 4% had no opinion.[45]

An April Public Religion Research Institute poll sponsored by the Ford Foundation found that 55% of all Americans supported same-sex marriage, while 39% were opposed.[46]

A Pew Research Center poll released in March found 54% of Americans favored same-sex marriage, 39% opposed, and 7% didn't know.[47] It also researched support for same-sex marriage among Republican leaning voters in the United States. 61% of Republican leaning voters aged 18–29 supported allowing same-sex couples to marry, while only 27% of Republican leaning voters over 50 years of age were supportive.[48] 52% of Republican voters aged 18–50 supported same-sex marriage.[49][50]

A Washington Post/ABC News poll from February–March found that a record high of 59% of Americans approved of same-sex marriage, with only 34% opposed and 7% with no opinion. The poll also revealed that 53% of the population in the states that did not allow same-sex couples to marry at the time approved of same-sex marriage. 50% of respondents agreed that the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution guarantees the freedom to marry regardless of sex or sexual orientation, while 41% disagreed, and 9% had no opinion.[51] The same poll also found that 81% of people believed that businesses should not be allowed to refuse to serve gays and lesbians. 16% disagreed, and 3% had no opinion. 78% thought that gay couples can be "just as good parents" as straight couples, while 18% disagreed and 4% had no opinion.[52]

2013 Edit

A November/December Public Religion Research Institute poll sponsored by the Ford Foundation found that 53% of all Americans supported same-sex marriage, while 41% were opposed and 6% unsure. The margin of error was 1.1%. The same poll found clear majorities in favor of same-sex marriage in the Northeast (60%), West (58%), and Midwest (51%). Only the South was evenly divided 48% in favor to 48% opposed. Further, nearly 7-in-10 (69%) of those born after 1980 (ages 18–33) favored allowing same-sex couples to marry.[53]

A Bloomberg National Poll conducted by Selzer & Company taken during September 20–23, 2013 found that 55% supported same-sex marriage, while 36% opposed and 9% were unsure.[54]

A September Quinnipiac University poll found that 56% of American adults and 57% of registered voters supported same-sex marriage. Only 36% of both groups were opposed.[55]

A July 10–14 poll by Gallup found support for same-sex marriage at 54%, a record high, and double the support of 27% Gallup first measured when the question was asked in 1996.[56]

A July poll by USA Today found that 55% of Americans supported same-sex marriage, while 40% did not.[57]

A May 9 Washington Post-ABC News poll found that 55% of Americans supported same-sex marriage, while 40% did not.[58]

A March 20–24 CBS News Poll found that 53% of Americans supported same-sex marriage, 39% opposed it, and 8% were undecided.[59] The same poll also found that 33% of Americans who thought same-sex couples should be allowed to legally marry said they once held the opposite view and had changed their opinion.

A March 7–10 Washington Post-ABC News[60] poll found that 58% of Americans supported same-sex marriage, while 36% opposed. The poll indicated that 52% of GOP-leaning independents under 50 years old supported same-sex marriage.[61]

A March Quinnipiac University poll of voters found 47% supported same-sex marriage and 43% were opposed.[62]

2012 Edit

A November 26–29 Gallup poll found that 53% of Americans supported same-sex marriage, while 46% did not.[63]

A November 16–19 CBS News poll found that 51% of Americans supported same-sex marriage, while 40% did not.[64]

A November 7–11 ABC News/Washington Post poll found that 51% of respondents supported same-sex marriage, while 47% were opposed.[65]

A June 6 CNN/ORC International poll showed that a majority of Americans supported same-sex marriage being legalized at 54%, while 42% were opposed.[66]

A May 22 NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll showed that 54% of Americans would support a law in their state making same-sex marriage legal, with 40% opposed.[67]

A May 17–20 ABC News/Washington Post poll showed that 53% believed same-sex marriage should be legal, with only 39% opposed, a low point for opposition in any national poll that far.[68][69]

A May 10 USA Today/Gallup Poll, taken one day after Barack Obama became the first sitting president to express support for same-sex marriage,[70] showed 51% of Americans agreed with the President's endorsement, while 45% disagreed.[71] A May 8 Gallup Poll showed majority support for same-sex marriage nationwide, with 50% in favor and 48% opposed.[72]

An April Pew Research Center poll showed support for same-sex marriage at 48%, while opposition fell to 44%.[7]

A March 7–10 ABC News/Washington Post poll found 52% of adults thought it should be legal for same-sex couples to get married, while 42% disagreed and 5% were unsure.[54] A March survey by the Public Religion Research Institute found 52% of Americans supported allowing same-sex couples to marry, while 44% opposed.[73]

A February 29 – March 3 NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll found 49% of adults supported allowing same-sex couples to marry, while 40% opposed.[74]

2011 Edit

Public support for same-sex marriage continued to grow in 2011. In February and March, a Pew Research Center for the People & the Press survey found about as many adults favored (45%) as opposed (46%) allowing same-sex couples to marry legally, compared to a 2009 Pew Research survey that found just 37% backed same-sex marriage while 54% opposed.[75] In March and April, polls by Gallup,[76] ABC News/Washington Post,[77] and CNN/Opinion Research[78] all showed that a majority of Americans approved of same-sex marriage.

In March, Pew reported that 57% of Democrats favored legal recognition for same-sex marriage, and 51% of independents agreed, but only 23% of Republicans agreed.[75] An April CNN/Opinion Research Poll showed majority support including 64% of Democrats and 55% of independents, but only 27% of Republicans.[78]

In March 2011, Democracy Corps conducted a survey of 1,000 likely 2012 election voters in 50 congressional districts considered political battlegrounds. It asked respondents to rate their feelings on the same-sex marriage issue on a 0–100 scale, with 100 being "very warm" or favorable feelings, and 0 being "very cold" or unfavorable feelings. 42% were on the "cool" or unfavorable side, and 35% were on the "warm" or favorable side.[79]

A May 2011 Gallup Poll also showed majority support for same-sex marriage, 53% in favor to 45% opposed. Gallup measured a 9-point increase in support, from 44% to 53%, indicating that support increased faster than in any previous year.[76]

2010 Edit

An August Associated Press/National Constitution Center poll found 52% agreed that the federal government should give legal recognition to marriages between couples of the same sex, an increase from 46% in 2009. 46% disagreed, compared to 53% in 2009.[80]

An August CNN/Opinion Research Poll showed that 49% of respondents thought gays and lesbians do have a constitutional right to get married and have their marriage recognized by law as valid, and 52% thought gays and lesbians should have that right.[81]

Earlier polls in February and May found opinion divided within the margin of error, but with a consistent trend of increasing support and decreasing opposition compared to prior years.[82][83] One August poll found majority opposition,[84] and a November exit poll of 17,504 voters by CNN during the 2010 midterm elections found 53% opposition with 41% support.[85]

2000s Edit

2009 Edit

An April 30 ABC News/Washington Post poll found support for allowing same-sex couples to marry in the United States ahead of opposition for the first time: 49% support, 46% opposition, and 5% with no opinion. In addition, 53% believed that same-sex marriages performed in other states should be legal in their states. 62% of Democrats and 52% of Independents supported same-sex marriage, while 74% of Republicans opposed.[86]

An April 22–26 poll by CBS/New York Times found 42% supported marriage for same-sex couples, 25% supported civil unions, and 28% opposed any legal recognition of same-sex couples.[87] 5% of respondents were unsure.

In April, Nate Silver noted that the discrepancy in support for same-sex marriage appeared to result from 5-10% of respondents who favored civil unions over same-sex marriage, but given only two choices, would support same-sex marriage.[88]

A LifeWay Research poll conducted in August 2009 found that 61% of Americans born between 1980 and 1991 saw nothing wrong with two people of the same gender getting married, while 39% disagreed. The survey was conducted on a demographically representative survey of 1,200 U.S. adults between 18 and 29 years old.[89]

2008 Edit

A December poll revealed that 32% supported the concept of civil unions, 31% would offer full marriage rights to same-sex couples, and 30% opposed any legal recognition for gay and lesbian partnerships.[90]

In a July 17 poll by the Quinnipiac University Polling Institute, 55 percent opposed same-sex marriage, and 36 percent were in favor.[91]

An ABC News poll found that a majority (58%) of Americans remained opposed to same-sex marriages, while a minority (36%) support them. However, on the question of a constitutional amendment, more were opposed than for it. The majority (51%) of Americans said the issue should be left for the states to decide, while 43% would agree with amending the Constitution.[citation needed]

A July poll by Quinnipiac University Polling Institute revealed that 32% would allow homosexual partners to legally marry, 33% would permit them to form civil unions, and 29% would grant them no legal recognition.[91][92]

2006 Edit

In May, a Gallup poll found that opposition to same-sex marriage had fallen slightly, as other polls found a sharper dip. In the poll, when asked if marriages between homosexuals should be recognized by law as valid, with the same rights as traditional marriages, 58% (down 1 point from Aug 2005, and 9 points from March 1996) of Americans responded that they should not be recognized. 39% (up 2 points from Aug 2005, and 12 points from 1996) felt same-sex marriages should be recognized by law. If "homosexuals" is replaced with "same-sex couples", 42% backed same-sex marriage while 56% opposed it.[93]

In June, a Princeton Survey Research Associates/Pew Research Center poll found a rise in those opposed to same-sex marriage, with 56% disapproving.

In March, a Princeton Survey Research Associates/Pew Research Center poll concluded that 39% of Americans supported same-sex marriage, while 51% opposed it, and 10% were undecided.

A Pew study in March found that 51% opposed same-sex marriage, with 39% supporting it, and the level of "strongly opposing" same-sex marriage had fallen from 42% to 28%.[94][95] Pew's May 2008 Survey found that for the first time, a majority of people did not oppose same-sex marriage at 49%. 20% opposed and 29% strongly opposed same-sex marriage, up 1% from the March 2006 Pew Research Results.[96]

2004 Edit

In December, a Princeton Survey Research Associates/Pew Research Center poll found 61% of Americans opposed (including 38% "strongly opposed").

20th century Edit

An October 1989 Yankelovich Clancy Shulman telephone poll found that 84% of Americans opposed same-sex marriage, with 12% supporting same-sex marriage, and 4% being not sure.[97]

A 1988 International Social Survey Programme poll found that 80.3% of Americans opposed same-sex marriage, while 11.9% of Americans supported same-sex marriage, and 2.1% of Americans neither agreed or disagreed.[98]

A 1988 National Opinion Research Center / General Social Survey / University of Chicago poll found that 82.6% of Americans opposed same-sex marriage, 10.7% of Americans supported it, 3.9% of Americans neither agreed or disagreed, and 2.8% didn't know / etc.[99]

Demographic differences Edit

By age Edit

Date(s) conducted Age Favor state sanctioned same-sex marriage Oppose state sanctioned same-sex marriage Don't Know / Refused Margin of error Sample Conducted by Polling type
June 8, 2017 – June 18, 2017 18-29 79% 19% 2% 351 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviews
August 5, 2017 – August 9, 2017 18-34 75% 2.82% 360 adults NBC News / Wall Street Journal Live interviews and cell phone interviews
June 8, 2017 – June 18, 2017 18-48 72% 24% 4% 1,016 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviews
June 8, 2017 – June 18, 2017 30-49 67% 28% 5% 665 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviews
August 5, 2017 – August 9, 2017 35-49 60% 2.82% 300 adults NBC News / Wall Street Journal Live interviews and cell phone interviews
August 5, 2017 – August 9, 2017 50-64 55% 2.82% 336 adults NBC News / Wall Street Journal Live interviews and cell phone interviews
June 8, 2017 – June 18, 2017 50-64 56% 38% 6% 778 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviews
June 8, 2017 – June 18, 2017 50+ 52% 41% 7% 1,452 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviews
August 5, 2017 – August 9, 2017 65+ 42% 2.82% 204 adults NBC News / Wall Street Journal Live interviews and cell phone interviews
June 8, 2017 – June 18, 2017 65+ 46% 45% 9% 674 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviews

By education Edit

Date(s) conducted Education Favor state sanctioned same-sex marriage Oppose state sanctioned same-sex marriage Don't Know / Refused Margin of error Sample Conducted by Polling type
June 8, 2017 – June 18, 2017 College grad 72% 23% 6% 719 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviews
College grad+ 75% 21% 5% 1,199 adults
August 5, 2017 – August 9, 2017 College graduates 68% 2.82% 468 adults NBC News / Wall Street Journal Live interviews and cell phone interviews
High school or less 48% 372 adults
June 8, 2017 – June 18, 2017 HS or less 53% 41% 6% 634 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviews
Non-college 57% 37% 6% 1,295 adults
Postgrad 79% 17% 3% 480 adults
August 5, 2017 – August 9, 2017 Postgraduates 72% 2.82% 168 adults NBC News / Wall Street Journal Live interviews and cell phone interviews
Some college 61% 192 adults
June 8, 2017 – June 18, 2017 Some college 62% 32% 6% 661 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviews

By ethnicity or race Edit

Date(s) conducted Ethnicity or race Favor state sanctioned same-sex marriage Oppose state sanctioned same-sex marriage Don't Know / Refused Margin of error Sample Conducted by Polling type
June 8, 2017 – June 18, 2017 Black, non-Hispanic 51% 41% 7% 7.3% 241 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviews
August 5, 2017 – August 9, 2017 African-American 51% 2.82% 144 adults NBC News / Wall Street Journal Live interviews and cell phone interviews
Hispanic 66% 840 adults
June 8, 2017 – June 18, 2017 Hispanic 60% 36% 5% 6.5% 297 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviews
August 5, 2017 – August 9, 2017 Total Non-White 60% 2.82% 312 adults NBC News / Wall Street Journal Live interviews and cell phone interviews
White 60% 888 adults
June 8, 2017 – June 18, 2017 White, non-Hispanic 64% 31% 5% 2.7% 1,737 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviews

By gender Edit

Date(s) conducted Gender Favor state sanctioned same-sex marriage Oppose state sanctioned same-sex marriage Don't Know / Refused Margin of error Sample Conducted by Polling type
August 5, 2017 – August 9, 2017 Men 61% 2.82% 576 adults NBC News / Wall Street Journal Live interviews and cell phone interviews
June 8, 2017 – June 18, 2017 60% 34% 6% 1,355 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviews
August 5, 2017 – August 9, 2017 Women 59% 2.82% 624 adults NBC News / Wall Street Journal Live interviews and cell phone interviews
June 8, 2017 – June 18, 2017 64% 30% 5% 1,149 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviews

By geography Edit

Date(s) conducted Geography Favor state sanctioned same-sex marriage Margin of error Sample Conducted by Polling type
August 5, 2017 – August 9, 2017 Rural 47% 2.82% NBC News / Wall Street Journal Live interviews and cell phone interviews
Suburban 61%
Urban 66%

By income Edit

Date(s) conducted Income Favor state sanctioned same-sex marriage Oppose state sanctioned same-sex marriage Don't Know / Refused Margin of error Sample Conducted by Polling type
June 8, 2017 – June 18, 2017 <$30,000 54% 39% 7% 568 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviews
$30,000-$74,999 65% 31% 5% 787 adults
$75,000+ 72% 23% 5% 951 adults

By political affiliation Edit

Date(s) conducted Political affiliation State sanctioned same-sex marriage should be valid
/
Favor state sanctioned same-sex marriage
Oppose state sanctioned same-sex marriage Don't Know / Refused Margin of error Sample Conducted by Polling type
June 8, 2017 – June 18, 2017 Dem/Dem lean 76% 19% 5% 3.2% 1,230 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviews
Democrat 73% 22% 5% 777 adults Pew Research Center
May 1, 2018 – May 10, 2018 Democrats 83% 4% 1,024 adults Gallup Telephone interviews
June 8, 2017 – June 18, 2017 Independent 70% 26% 5% 989 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviews
May 1, 2018 – May 10, 2018 Independents 71% 4% 1,024 adults Gallup Telephone interviews
June 8, 2017 – June 18, 2017 Rep/Rep lean 47% 48% 5% 3.5% 1,050 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviews
Republican 40% 54% 5% 612 adults Pew Research Center
May 1, 2018 – May 10, 2018 Republicans 44% 4% 1,024 adults Gallup Telephone interviews
February 11, 2020 – November 22, 2020 Republicans 51% 1.1% 10,052 adults PRRI Interviews

By political affiliation by generation Edit

Date(s) conducted Political affiliation
by
generation
Favor state sanctioned same-sex marriage Oppose state sanctioned same-sex marriage Don't Know / Refused Margin of error Sample Conducted by Polling type
June 8, 2017 – June 18, 2017 Democratic Millennials 87% 12% 2% 344 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviews
Democratic Gen Xers 76% 18% 5% 268 adults
Democratic Baby Boomers 70% 26% 4% 463 adults
Democratic Silents 56% 31% 13% 140 adults
Republican Millennials 60% 38% 2% 198 adults
Republican Gen Xers 51% 43% 6% 215 adults
Republican Baby Boomers 42% 53% 6% 421 adults
Republican Silents 29% 62% 9% 188 adults

By political affiliation by ideology Edit

Date(s) conducted Political affiliation
by
ideology
Favor state sanctioned same-sex marriage Oppose state sanctioned same-sex marriage Don't Know / Refused Margin of error Sample Conducted by Polling type
June 8, 2017 – June 18, 2017 Conservative Rep/Lean Rep 39% 55% 6% 698 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviews
Liberal Dem/Lean Dem 66% 27% 7% 617 adults
Moderate/Cons Dem/Lean Dem 88% 10% 2% 613 adults
Moderate/Lib Rep/Lean Rep 63% 33% 4% 352 adults

By religious affiliation Edit

Date(s) conducted Religious affiliation State sanctioned same-sex marriage should be valid
/
Favor state sanctioned same-sex marriage
Oppose state sanctioned same-sex marriage Don't Know / Refused Margin of error Sample Conducted by Polling type
May 3, 2017 – May 7, 2017 Catholics 65% 4% Gallup Telephone interviews
Protestants/Christians (nonspecific) 55%
June 8, 2017 – June 18, 2017 Total Catholic 67% 28% 6% 502 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviews
Total Protestant 48% 46% 6% 1,165 adults
Total Unaffiliated 85% 10% 4% 597 adults
September 9 – 22, 2020 Hispanic Catholics 78% Public Religion Research Institute Online (2,496), some telephone (42)[100]
White Catholics 67%
White mainline Protestants 79%
Hispanic Protestants 68%
Black Protestants 57%
White evangelical Protestants 34%
Non-Christian religious 72%
Christian: Other 56%
Unaffiliated 90%

By religious attendance Edit

Date(s) conducted Religious attendance Favor state sanctioned same-sex marriage Oppose state sanctioned same-sex marriage Don't Know / Refused Margin of error Sample Conducted by Polling type
June 8, 2017 – June 18, 2017 Less than weekly 75% 20% 5% 1,619 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviews
August 5, 2017 – August 9, 2017 Monthly 59% 2.82% 204 adults NBC News / Wall Street Journal Live interviews and cell phone interviews
Never 80% 288 adults
Weekly 34% 384 adults
June 8, 2017 – June 18, 2017 Weekly or more 34% 66% 6% 863 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviews
August 5, 2017 – August 9, 2017 Yearly 70% 2.82% 312 adults NBC News / Wall Street Journal Live interviews and cell phone interviews

Regional, state, and local level polls Edit

By state, federal district, or territory Edit

Date(s) conducted State,
federal district,
or
territory
Favor state sanctioned same-sex marriage Oppose state sanctioned same-sex marriage Don't Know / Refused Sample Conducted by Polling type
April 5, 2022 – December 23, 2022 Alabama 53% 41% 6% 261 adults Public Religion Research Institute[1] Telephone interviews and cell phone interviews
Alaska 70% 30% N/A 160 adults
Arizona 70% 26% 4% 558 adults
Arkansas 51% 47% 1% 176 adults
California 72% 26% 2% 2,295 adults
Colorado 74% 24% 2% 389 adults
Connecticut 81% 18% 1% 274 adults
Delaware 69% 29% 2% 164 adults
Florida 69% 28% 3% 1,457 adults
Georgia 62% 36% 3% 601 adults
Hawaii 69% 30% 1% 157 adults
Idaho 64% 36% N/A 167 adults
Illinois 77% 20% 2% 740 adults
Indiana 67% 31% 1% 414 adults
Iowa 75% 20% 4% 218 adults
Kansas 69% 30% 1% 177 adults
Kentucky 57% 42% 1% 516 adults
Louisiana 62% 36% 2% 214 adults
Maine 82% 19% N/A 167 adults
Maryland 71% 26% 2% 401 adults
Massachusetts 83% 12% 4% 446 adults
Michigan 68% 30% 2% 715 adults
Minnesota 77% 21% 2% 403 adults
Mississippi 49% 48% 4% 178 adults
Missouri 63% 36% 1% 406 adults
Montana 70% 29% 1% 164 adults
Nebraska 60% 33% 6% 163 adults
Nevada 78% 20% 2% 196 adults
New Hampshire 82% 17% 1% 182 adults
New Jersey 76% 21% 3% 590 adults
New Mexico 72% 28% 1% 527 adults
New York 75% 21% 3% 1,133 adults
North Carolina 65% 34% 2% 686 adults
North Dakota 66% 34% 1% 157 adults
Ohio 70% 28% 2% 837 adults
Oklahoma 54% 44% 2% 200 adults
Oregon 78% 22% N/A 325 adults
Pennsylvania 68% 29% 3% 979 adults
Rhode Island 80% 14% 6% 157 adults
South Carolina 55% 40% 6% 304 adults
South Dakota 63% 37% 1% 156 adults
Tennessee 52% 44% 4% 436 adults
Texas 62% 36% 2% 1,611 adults
Utah 65% 34% 1% 193 adults
Vermont 70% 29% N/A 156 adults
Virginia 74% 24% 2% 652 adults
Washington 83% 15% 2% 583 adults
West Virginia 62% 38% 1% 156 adults
Wisconsin 72% 26% 2% 466 adults
Wyoming 62% 38% N/A 161 adults
District of Columbia 78% 17% 4% 160 adults Public Religion Research Institute

By metro area Edit

Date(s) conducted Metro area Favor state sanctioned same-sex marriage Oppose state sanctioned same-sex marriage Don't Know / Refused Sample Conducted by Polling type
January 7, 2020-December 20, 2020 Albany 83% 9% 8% 185 adults Public Religion Research Institute Telephone and cell phone interviews[101]
Albuquerque 81% 11% 7% 174 adults
Allentown 63% 35% 1% 155 adults
Atlanta 62% 34% 5% 1,070 adults
Austin 74% 23% 3% 266 adults
Baltimore 68% 27% 6% 460 adults
Birmingham 65% 35% 0% 194 adults
Boston 80% 16% 4% 674 adults
Buffalo 43% 46% 10% 206 adults
Charlotte 63% 30% 7% 383 adults
Chicago 71% 25% 4% 1,167 adults
Cincinnati 70% 27% 3% 358 adults
Cleveland 89% 6% 5% 330 adults
Columbus 62% 35% 3% 360 adults
Dallas 73% 22% 5% 922 adults
Denver 80% 15% 5% 508 adults
Detroit 69% 24% 6% 728 adults
Fresno 51% 44% 5% 126 adults
Grand Rapids 53% 45% 2% 149 adults
Hartford 89% 11% 0% 187 adults
Houston 67% 29% 4% 782 adults
Indianapolis 69% 25% 6% 393 adults
Jacksonville 86% 11% 3% 270 adults
Kansas City 58% 35% 7% 280 adults
Knoxville 63% 29% 7% 155 adults
Las Vegas 77% 19% 4% 317 adults
Los Angeles 70% 25% 5% 781 adults
Louisville 79% 13% 8% 229 adults
Memphis 73% 22% 5% 160 adults
Miami 81% 15% 4% 974 adults
Milwaukee 76% 24% 0% 245 adults
Minneapolis-St. Paul 79% 17% 5% 587 adults
Nashville 80% 15% 5% 262 adults
New Orleans 68% 31% 0% 168 adults
New York City 67% 28% 5% 3,004 adults
Oklahoma City 62% 30% 8% 188 adults
Omaha 86% 14% 0% 149 adults
Orlando 77% 16% 7% 446 adults
Philadelphia 70% 23% 7% 937 adults
Phoenix 66% 27% 7% 724 adults
Pittsburgh 80% 18% 1% 427 adults
Portland 76% 17% 6% 464 adults
Providence 62% 32% 6% 212 adults
Raleigh 46% 45% 10% 232 adults
Richmond 74% 20% 7% 189 adults
Riverside 73% 19% 8% 544 adults
Rochester 71% 26% 3% 170 adults
Sacramento 73% 26% 1% 348 adults
Salt Lake City 58% 38% 3% 209 adults
San Antonio 71% 16% 12% 326 adults
San Diego 82% 18% 1% 461 adults
San Francisco 78% 21% 1% 703 adults
San Jose 86% 13% 2% 220 adults
Seattle 73% 23% 5% 656 adults
St. Louis 68% 25% 6% 400 adults
Tampa-St. Petersburg 70% 26% 4% 566 adults
Tucson 82% 7% 10% 194 adults
Virginia Beach 65% 20% 16% 316 adults
Washington D.C. 71% 25% 4% 1,174 adults

By region Edit

Date(s) conducted Region Favor state sanctioned same-sex marriage
/
Support state sanctioned same-sex marriage
Oppose state sanctioned same-sex marriage Don't Know / Refused
/
No answer
Margin of error Sample Conducted by Polling type
April 5, 2017 – December 23, 2017 Midwest 62% 31% 8% 0.6% Public Religion Research Institute Telephone interviews and cell phone interviews
August 5, 2017 – August 9, 2017 53% 2.82% NBC News / Wall Street Journal Live interviews and cell phone interviews
June 8, 2017 – June 18, 2017 62% 33% 6% 552 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviews
April 5, 2017 – December 23, 2017 Northeast 69% 23% 8% 0.6% Public Religion Research Institute Telephone interviews and cell phone interviews
August 5, 2017 – August 9, 2017 70% 2.82% NBC News / Wall Street Journal Live interviews and cell phone interviews
June 8, 2017 – June 18, 2017 73% 23% 4% 432 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviews
March 12, 2018 – March 25, 2018 South[a] 55% 42% 3% 2.4% 4,132 adult residents Online survey
April 5, 2017 – December 23, 2017 West 66% 26% 9% 0.6% Public Religion Research Institute Telephone interviews and cell phone interviews
August 5, 2017 – August 9, 2017 67% 2.82% NBC News / Wall Street Journal Live interviews and cell phone interviews
June 8, 2017 – June 18, 2017 68% 28% 4% 577 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviews

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, and Virginia

References Edit

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public, opinion, same, marriage, united, states, significantly, changed, since, 1990s, overwhelming, majority, americans, favor, same, marriage, degree, public, support, same, marriage, state, 2022, plurality, support, approval, same, marriage, higher, younger. Public opinion of same sex marriage in the United States has significantly changed since the 1990s 2 and an overwhelming majority of Americans now favor same sex marriage 3 Degree of public support for same sex marriage by state in 2022 1 80 83 70 79 60 69 50 59 49 plurality support Approval of same sex marriage is higher in younger generations 4 among 18 34 year olds support is near universal 5 From 1988 to 2009 support for recognized same sex marriage increased between 1 and 1 5 per year and accelerated thereafter 6 rising above 50 in Pew Research Center polling for the first time in 2011 7 A 2022 Public Religion Research Institute poll found that a majority of people in every state support same sex marriage except in Mississippi where there is plurality support 8 A 2023 New York Times Siena poll found that 70 of Americans support same sex marriage and 22 oppose it 9 Garretson 2018 writes The transformation of America s response to homosexuality has been and continues to be one of the most rapid and sustained shifts in mass attitudes since the start of public polling 2 Contents 1 Overview 2 National polls 2 1 Since Obergefell v Hodges 2 1 1 2020 present 2 1 2 2016 2019 2 2 Before Obergefell v Hodges 2 2 1 2010 2015 2 2 1 1 2015 2 2 1 2 2014 2 2 1 3 2013 2 2 1 4 2012 2 2 1 5 2011 2 2 1 6 2010 2 2 2 2000s 2 2 2 1 2009 2 2 2 2 2008 2 2 2 3 2006 2 2 2 4 2004 2 2 3 20th century 2 3 Demographic differences 2 3 1 By age 2 3 2 By education 2 3 3 By ethnicity or race 2 3 4 By gender 2 3 5 By geography 2 3 6 By income 2 3 7 By political affiliation 2 3 8 By political affiliation by generation 2 3 9 By political affiliation by ideology 2 3 10 By religious affiliation 2 3 11 By religious attendance 3 Regional state and local level polls 3 1 By state federal district or territory 3 2 By metro area 3 3 By region 4 See also 5 Notes 6 ReferencesOverview EditPublic opinion of same sex marriage in the United States has changed radically since polling of the American people regarding the issue was first conducted in 1988 10 The issue of same sex marriage was not brought up as an issue for public debate until at least the 1950s 11 and was not a political issue until the 1970s 12 According to statistician Nate Silver of the poll aggregator FiveThirtyEight from 1988 to April 2009 support for same sex marriage increased between 1 and 1 5 per year and about 4 from April 2009 to August 2010 13 A Pew Research Center poll conducted from May 21 2008 to May 25 2008 found that for the first time a majority of Americans did not oppose same sex marriage with opposition having fallen to 49 14 An ABC News Washington Post poll conducted from April 21 2009 to April 24 2009 found that for the first time a plurality of Americans supported same sex marriage at 49 and that a majority of Americans supported the marriages of same sex couples validly entered into in one state being recognized in all states at 53 15 A CNN Opinion Research poll conducted from August 6 2010 to August 10 2010 found that for the first time a majority of Americans supported same sex marriage at 52 16 A Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research poll conducted from January 25 2015 to January 31 2015 found that for the first time 60 of Americans supported same sex marriage 17 Continual polling by Gallup over the course of more than two decades has shown that support for same sex marriage has grown rapidly while opposition has simultaneously collapsed In 1996 68 of Americans opposed same sex marriage while only 27 supported In 2018 67 of Americans supported same sex marriage while only 31 opposed 18 As of 2018 60 of Americans said they would not mind if their child married someone of the same gender 19 National polls EditSince Obergefell v Hodges Edit 2020 present Edit A 2023 New York Times Siena poll found that 70 of Americans supported same sex marriage while 22 opposed it 9 A 2023 Gallup poll found that 71 of Americans supported same sex marriage while 28 opposed it 20 21 According to The Nation a private poll conducted by Centerline Action before the passage of the Respect for Marriage Act in late 2022 found that 73 percent of Americans support same sex marriage the percentage of Americans opposed to same sex marriage was not listed 22 A December 2022 Quinnipiac University poll found that 68 of Americans supported same sex marriage while 22 percent opposed it 23 A September 2022 Grinnell College National Poll found that 74 of Americans believe same sex marriage should be a guaranteed right while 13 disagreed and 13 were uncertain 24 25 A May 2022 Gallup poll found that 71 of Americans supported same sex marriage while 28 were against 21 26 The 2022 American Values Atlas by Public Religion Research Institute found that 69 of Americans supported same sex marriage while 28 opposed it 8 A June 2021 CBS News YouGov poll found that 64 of Americans supported same sex marriage while 36 were opposed Two thirds of Republicans over age 45 are opposed but the opinions of Republicans under age 45 are almost evenly split with 52 oppose and 48 support same sex marriage 27 An 2021 Public Religion Research Institute poll found that 67 of Americans supported same sex marriage while 32 were opposed 3 A June 2021 Gallup poll found that 70 of Americans supported same sex marriage and 29 were against 28 A June 2020 Gallup poll found that 67 of Americans supported same sex marriage while 31 were against matching their May 2018 record high A Public Religion Research Institute nationwide amp state by state poll conducted in 2020 found that 67 of Americans supported same sex marriage 27 opposed and 5 refused to answer or answered don t know with there being majority support for same sex marriage in 46 states and plurality support in 4 states 1 A 2020 American National Election Studies poll found that 66 of Americans supported legal recognition of same sex marriage 20 supported civil unions while 14 of Americans were opposed to any legal recognition of same sex relationships 29 2016 2019 Edit A June 2019 CBS News poll found that 67 of Americans supported same sex marriage while 28 were against 30 A June 2019 IPSOS Reuters poll found that 58 of Americans supported same sex marriage while 28 were against 31 A May 2019 Pew Research Center poll found 61 of Americans supported same sex marriage while 31 were against 32 A May 2019 Gallup poll found that 63 of Americans supported same sex marriage with 36 opposing it While this is a drop when compared to 2018 same sex marriage approval still remains stable 33 A May 2018 Gallup poll found that 67 of Americans supported same sex marriage 31 opposed and 2 had no opinion 18 An April 2018 NBC News poll found that 64 of Americans supported same sex marriage 33 opposed and 3 had no opinion 34 The poll was reported by NBC News as notable as it found that 55 of Southerners supported same sex marriage which represented an historic change for a region that was previously staunchly opposed 35 A Public Religion Research Institute nationwide amp state by state poll conducted throughout 2017 found that 61 of Americans supported same sex marriage 30 opposed and 9 refused to answer or answered don t know with there being majority support for same sex marriage in 44 states plurality support in 4 states plurality opposition in 1 state and majority opposition in 1 state 36 An August 2017 NBC News The Wall Street Journal poll found that 60 of Americans supported same sex marriage 33 opposed and 7 had no opinion 37 38 A June 2017 Pew Research Center poll found 62 of Americans supported same sex marriage 32 opposed and 6 had no opinion This marked the first Pew poll where a majority of Baby Boomers supported same sex marriage did not oppose same sex marriage 39 A May 2017 Gallup poll found 64 of Americans supported same sex marriage 34 opposed and 2 had no opinion This marked the first Gallup poll where a majority of Protestants supported same sex marriage 40 A May 2016 Gallup poll found 61 of Americans supported same sex marriage 37 opposed and 2 had no opinion This marked the first Gallup poll where a majority of Americans aged 65 and older supported same sex marriage 41 Before Obergefell v Hodges Edit 2010 2015 Edit 2015 Edit A May Gallup poll found 60 of Americans supported same sex marriage 37 opposed and 3 had no opinion 42 A February March Wall Street Journal poll found that 59 of Americans favored same sex marriage 43 A January February Human Rights Campaign poll found that 60 of Americans favored same sex marriage while 37 opposed The same poll also found that 46 of respondents knew a same sex couple who had gotten married 17 A February 12 15 CNN ORC poll found that 63 of Americans believed same sex marriage is a constitutional right while 36 disagreed 44 2014 Edit A May Gallup poll found that 55 of Americans supported same sex marriage 42 opposed and 4 had no opinion 45 An April Public Religion Research Institute poll sponsored by the Ford Foundation found that 55 of all Americans supported same sex marriage while 39 were opposed 46 A Pew Research Center poll released in March found 54 of Americans favored same sex marriage 39 opposed and 7 didn t know 47 It also researched support for same sex marriage among Republican leaning voters in the United States 61 of Republican leaning voters aged 18 29 supported allowing same sex couples to marry while only 27 of Republican leaning voters over 50 years of age were supportive 48 52 of Republican voters aged 18 50 supported same sex marriage 49 50 A Washington Post ABC News poll from February March found that a record high of 59 of Americans approved of same sex marriage with only 34 opposed and 7 with no opinion The poll also revealed that 53 of the population in the states that did not allow same sex couples to marry at the time approved of same sex marriage 50 of respondents agreed that the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution guarantees the freedom to marry regardless of sex or sexual orientation while 41 disagreed and 9 had no opinion 51 The same poll also found that 81 of people believed that businesses should not be allowed to refuse to serve gays and lesbians 16 disagreed and 3 had no opinion 78 thought that gay couples can be just as good parents as straight couples while 18 disagreed and 4 had no opinion 52 2013 Edit A November December Public Religion Research Institute poll sponsored by the Ford Foundation found that 53 of all Americans supported same sex marriage while 41 were opposed and 6 unsure The margin of error was 1 1 The same poll found clear majorities in favor of same sex marriage in the Northeast 60 West 58 and Midwest 51 Only the South was evenly divided 48 in favor to 48 opposed Further nearly 7 in 10 69 of those born after 1980 ages 18 33 favored allowing same sex couples to marry 53 A Bloomberg National Poll conducted by Selzer amp Company taken during September 20 23 2013 found that 55 supported same sex marriage while 36 opposed and 9 were unsure 54 A September Quinnipiac University poll found that 56 of American adults and 57 of registered voters supported same sex marriage Only 36 of both groups were opposed 55 A July 10 14 poll by Gallup found support for same sex marriage at 54 a record high and double the support of 27 Gallup first measured when the question was asked in 1996 56 A July poll by USA Today found that 55 of Americans supported same sex marriage while 40 did not 57 A May 9 Washington Post ABC News poll found that 55 of Americans supported same sex marriage while 40 did not 58 A March 20 24 CBS News Poll found that 53 of Americans supported same sex marriage 39 opposed it and 8 were undecided 59 The same poll also found that 33 of Americans who thought same sex couples should be allowed to legally marry said they once held the opposite view and had changed their opinion A March 7 10 Washington Post ABC News 60 poll found that 58 of Americans supported same sex marriage while 36 opposed The poll indicated that 52 of GOP leaning independents under 50 years old supported same sex marriage 61 A March Quinnipiac University poll of voters found 47 supported same sex marriage and 43 were opposed 62 2012 Edit A November 26 29 Gallup poll found that 53 of Americans supported same sex marriage while 46 did not 63 A November 16 19 CBS News poll found that 51 of Americans supported same sex marriage while 40 did not 64 A November 7 11 ABC News Washington Post poll found that 51 of respondents supported same sex marriage while 47 were opposed 65 A June 6 CNN ORC International poll showed that a majority of Americans supported same sex marriage being legalized at 54 while 42 were opposed 66 A May 22 NBC News Wall Street Journal poll showed that 54 of Americans would support a law in their state making same sex marriage legal with 40 opposed 67 A May 17 20 ABC News Washington Post poll showed that 53 believed same sex marriage should be legal with only 39 opposed a low point for opposition in any national poll that far 68 69 A May 10 USA Today Gallup Poll taken one day after Barack Obama became the first sitting president to express support for same sex marriage 70 showed 51 of Americans agreed with the President s endorsement while 45 disagreed 71 A May 8 Gallup Poll showed majority support for same sex marriage nationwide with 50 in favor and 48 opposed 72 An April Pew Research Center poll showed support for same sex marriage at 48 while opposition fell to 44 7 A March 7 10 ABC News Washington Post poll found 52 of adults thought it should be legal for same sex couples to get married while 42 disagreed and 5 were unsure 54 A March survey by the Public Religion Research Institute found 52 of Americans supported allowing same sex couples to marry while 44 opposed 73 A February 29 March 3 NBC News Wall Street Journal poll found 49 of adults supported allowing same sex couples to marry while 40 opposed 74 2011 Edit Public support for same sex marriage continued to grow in 2011 In February and March a Pew Research Center for the People amp the Press survey found about as many adults favored 45 as opposed 46 allowing same sex couples to marry legally compared to a 2009 Pew Research survey that found just 37 backed same sex marriage while 54 opposed 75 In March and April polls by Gallup 76 ABC News Washington Post 77 and CNN Opinion Research 78 all showed that a majority of Americans approved of same sex marriage In March Pew reported that 57 of Democrats favored legal recognition for same sex marriage and 51 of independents agreed but only 23 of Republicans agreed 75 An April CNN Opinion Research Poll showed majority support including 64 of Democrats and 55 of independents but only 27 of Republicans 78 In March 2011 Democracy Corps conducted a survey of 1 000 likely 2012 election voters in 50 congressional districts considered political battlegrounds It asked respondents to rate their feelings on the same sex marriage issue on a 0 100 scale with 100 being very warm or favorable feelings and 0 being very cold or unfavorable feelings 42 were on the cool or unfavorable side and 35 were on the warm or favorable side 79 A May 2011 Gallup Poll also showed majority support for same sex marriage 53 in favor to 45 opposed Gallup measured a 9 point increase in support from 44 to 53 indicating that support increased faster than in any previous year 76 2010 Edit An August Associated Press National Constitution Center poll found 52 agreed that the federal government should give legal recognition to marriages between couples of the same sex an increase from 46 in 2009 46 disagreed compared to 53 in 2009 80 An August CNN Opinion Research Poll showed that 49 of respondents thought gays and lesbians do have a constitutional right to get married and have their marriage recognized by law as valid and 52 thought gays and lesbians should have that right 81 Earlier polls in February and May found opinion divided within the margin of error but with a consistent trend of increasing support and decreasing opposition compared to prior years 82 83 One August poll found majority opposition 84 and a November exit poll of 17 504 voters by CNN during the 2010 midterm elections found 53 opposition with 41 support 85 2000s Edit 2009 Edit An April 30 ABC News Washington Post poll found support for allowing same sex couples to marry in the United States ahead of opposition for the first time 49 support 46 opposition and 5 with no opinion In addition 53 believed that same sex marriages performed in other states should be legal in their states 62 of Democrats and 52 of Independents supported same sex marriage while 74 of Republicans opposed 86 An April 22 26 poll by CBS New York Times found 42 supported marriage for same sex couples 25 supported civil unions and 28 opposed any legal recognition of same sex couples 87 5 of respondents were unsure In April Nate Silver noted that the discrepancy in support for same sex marriage appeared to result from 5 10 of respondents who favored civil unions over same sex marriage but given only two choices would support same sex marriage 88 A LifeWay Research poll conducted in August 2009 found that 61 of Americans born between 1980 and 1991 saw nothing wrong with two people of the same gender getting married while 39 disagreed The survey was conducted on a demographically representative survey of 1 200 U S adults between 18 and 29 years old 89 2008 Edit A December poll revealed that 32 supported the concept of civil unions 31 would offer full marriage rights to same sex couples and 30 opposed any legal recognition for gay and lesbian partnerships 90 In a July 17 poll by the Quinnipiac University Polling Institute 55 percent opposed same sex marriage and 36 percent were in favor 91 An ABC News poll found that a majority 58 of Americans remained opposed to same sex marriages while a minority 36 support them However on the question of a constitutional amendment more were opposed than for it The majority 51 of Americans said the issue should be left for the states to decide while 43 would agree with amending the Constitution citation needed A July poll by Quinnipiac University Polling Institute revealed that 32 would allow homosexual partners to legally marry 33 would permit them to form civil unions and 29 would grant them no legal recognition 91 92 2006 Edit In May a Gallup poll found that opposition to same sex marriage had fallen slightly as other polls found a sharper dip In the poll when asked if marriages between homosexuals should be recognized by law as valid with the same rights as traditional marriages 58 down 1 point from Aug 2005 and 9 points from March 1996 of Americans responded that they should not be recognized 39 up 2 points from Aug 2005 and 12 points from 1996 felt same sex marriages should be recognized by law If homosexuals is replaced with same sex couples 42 backed same sex marriage while 56 opposed it 93 In June a Princeton Survey Research Associates Pew Research Center poll found a rise in those opposed to same sex marriage with 56 disapproving In March a Princeton Survey Research Associates Pew Research Center poll concluded that 39 of Americans supported same sex marriage while 51 opposed it and 10 were undecided A Pew study in March found that 51 opposed same sex marriage with 39 supporting it and the level of strongly opposing same sex marriage had fallen from 42 to 28 94 95 Pew s May 2008 Survey found that for the first time a majority of people did not oppose same sex marriage at 49 20 opposed and 29 strongly opposed same sex marriage up 1 from the March 2006 Pew Research Results 96 2004 Edit In December a Princeton Survey Research Associates Pew Research Center poll found 61 of Americans opposed including 38 strongly opposed 20th century Edit An October 1989 Yankelovich Clancy Shulman telephone poll found that 84 of Americans opposed same sex marriage with 12 supporting same sex marriage and 4 being not sure 97 A 1988 International Social Survey Programme poll found that 80 3 of Americans opposed same sex marriage while 11 9 of Americans supported same sex marriage and 2 1 of Americans neither agreed or disagreed 98 A 1988 National Opinion Research Center General Social Survey University of Chicago poll found that 82 6 of Americans opposed same sex marriage 10 7 of Americans supported it 3 9 of Americans neither agreed or disagreed and 2 8 didn t know etc 99 Demographic differences Edit By age Edit Date s conducted Age Favor state sanctioned same sex marriage Oppose state sanctioned same sex marriage Don t Know Refused Margin of error Sample Conducted by Polling typeJune 8 2017 June 18 2017 18 29 79 19 2 351 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviewsAugust 5 2017 August 9 2017 18 34 75 2 82 360 adults NBC News Wall Street Journal Live interviews and cell phone interviewsJune 8 2017 June 18 2017 18 48 72 24 4 1 016 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviewsJune 8 2017 June 18 2017 30 49 67 28 5 665 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviewsAugust 5 2017 August 9 2017 35 49 60 2 82 300 adults NBC News Wall Street Journal Live interviews and cell phone interviewsAugust 5 2017 August 9 2017 50 64 55 2 82 336 adults NBC News Wall Street Journal Live interviews and cell phone interviewsJune 8 2017 June 18 2017 50 64 56 38 6 778 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviewsJune 8 2017 June 18 2017 50 52 41 7 1 452 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviewsAugust 5 2017 August 9 2017 65 42 2 82 204 adults NBC News Wall Street Journal Live interviews and cell phone interviewsJune 8 2017 June 18 2017 65 46 45 9 674 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviewsBy education Edit Date s conducted Education Favor state sanctioned same sex marriage Oppose state sanctioned same sex marriage Don t Know Refused Margin of error Sample Conducted by Polling typeJune 8 2017 June 18 2017 College grad 72 23 6 719 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviewsCollege grad 75 21 5 1 199 adultsAugust 5 2017 August 9 2017 College graduates 68 2 82 468 adults NBC News Wall Street Journal Live interviews and cell phone interviewsHigh school or less 48 372 adultsJune 8 2017 June 18 2017 HS or less 53 41 6 634 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviewsNon college 57 37 6 1 295 adultsPostgrad 79 17 3 480 adultsAugust 5 2017 August 9 2017 Postgraduates 72 2 82 168 adults NBC News Wall Street Journal Live interviews and cell phone interviewsSome college 61 192 adultsJune 8 2017 June 18 2017 Some college 62 32 6 661 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviewsBy ethnicity or race Edit Date s conducted Ethnicity or race Favor state sanctioned same sex marriage Oppose state sanctioned same sex marriage Don t Know Refused Margin of error Sample Conducted by Polling typeJune 8 2017 June 18 2017 Black non Hispanic 51 41 7 7 3 241 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviewsAugust 5 2017 August 9 2017 African American 51 2 82 144 adults NBC News Wall Street Journal Live interviews and cell phone interviewsHispanic 66 840 adultsJune 8 2017 June 18 2017 Hispanic 60 36 5 6 5 297 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviewsAugust 5 2017 August 9 2017 Total Non White 60 2 82 312 adults NBC News Wall Street Journal Live interviews and cell phone interviewsWhite 60 888 adultsJune 8 2017 June 18 2017 White non Hispanic 64 31 5 2 7 1 737 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviewsBy gender Edit Date s conducted Gender Favor state sanctioned same sex marriage Oppose state sanctioned same sex marriage Don t Know Refused Margin of error Sample Conducted by Polling typeAugust 5 2017 August 9 2017 Men 61 2 82 576 adults NBC News Wall Street Journal Live interviews and cell phone interviewsJune 8 2017 June 18 2017 60 34 6 1 355 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviewsAugust 5 2017 August 9 2017 Women 59 2 82 624 adults NBC News Wall Street Journal Live interviews and cell phone interviewsJune 8 2017 June 18 2017 64 30 5 1 149 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviewsBy geography Edit Date s conducted Geography Favor state sanctioned same sex marriage Margin of error Sample Conducted by Polling typeAugust 5 2017 August 9 2017 Rural 47 2 82 NBC News Wall Street Journal Live interviews and cell phone interviewsSuburban 61 Urban 66 By income Edit Date s conducted Income Favor state sanctioned same sex marriage Oppose state sanctioned same sex marriage Don t Know Refused Margin of error Sample Conducted by Polling typeJune 8 2017 June 18 2017 lt 30 000 54 39 7 568 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviews 30 000 74 999 65 31 5 787 adults 75 000 72 23 5 951 adultsBy political affiliation Edit Date s conducted Political affiliation State sanctioned same sex marriage should be valid Favor state sanctioned same sex marriage Oppose state sanctioned same sex marriage Don t Know Refused Margin of error Sample Conducted by Polling typeJune 8 2017 June 18 2017 Dem Dem lean 76 19 5 3 2 1 230 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviewsDemocrat 73 22 5 777 adults Pew Research CenterMay 1 2018 May 10 2018 Democrats 83 4 1 024 adults Gallup Telephone interviewsJune 8 2017 June 18 2017 Independent 70 26 5 989 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviewsMay 1 2018 May 10 2018 Independents 71 4 1 024 adults Gallup Telephone interviewsJune 8 2017 June 18 2017 Rep Rep lean 47 48 5 3 5 1 050 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviewsRepublican 40 54 5 612 adults Pew Research CenterMay 1 2018 May 10 2018 Republicans 44 4 1 024 adults Gallup Telephone interviewsFebruary 11 2020 November 22 2020 Republicans 51 1 1 10 052 adults PRRI InterviewsBy political affiliation by generation Edit Date s conducted Political affiliationbygeneration Favor state sanctioned same sex marriage Oppose state sanctioned same sex marriage Don t Know Refused Margin of error Sample Conducted by Polling typeJune 8 2017 June 18 2017 Democratic Millennials 87 12 2 344 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviewsDemocratic Gen Xers 76 18 5 268 adultsDemocratic Baby Boomers 70 26 4 463 adultsDemocratic Silents 56 31 13 140 adultsRepublican Millennials 60 38 2 198 adultsRepublican Gen Xers 51 43 6 215 adultsRepublican Baby Boomers 42 53 6 421 adultsRepublican Silents 29 62 9 188 adultsBy political affiliation by ideology Edit Date s conducted Political affiliationbyideology Favor state sanctioned same sex marriage Oppose state sanctioned same sex marriage Don t Know Refused Margin of error Sample Conducted by Polling typeJune 8 2017 June 18 2017 Conservative Rep Lean Rep 39 55 6 698 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviewsLiberal Dem Lean Dem 66 27 7 617 adultsModerate Cons Dem Lean Dem 88 10 2 613 adultsModerate Lib Rep Lean Rep 63 33 4 352 adultsBy religious affiliation Edit Date s conducted Religious affiliation State sanctioned same sex marriage should be valid Favor state sanctioned same sex marriage Oppose state sanctioned same sex marriage Don t Know Refused Margin of error Sample Conducted by Polling typeMay 3 2017 May 7 2017 Catholics 65 4 Gallup Telephone interviewsProtestants Christians nonspecific 55 June 8 2017 June 18 2017 Total Catholic 67 28 6 502 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviewsTotal Protestant 48 46 6 1 165 adultsTotal Unaffiliated 85 10 4 597 adultsSeptember 9 22 2020 Hispanic Catholics 78 Public Religion Research Institute Online 2 496 some telephone 42 100 White Catholics 67 White mainline Protestants 79 Hispanic Protestants 68 Black Protestants 57 White evangelical Protestants 34 Non Christian religious 72 Christian Other 56 Unaffiliated 90 By religious attendance Edit Date s conducted Religious attendance Favor state sanctioned same sex marriage Oppose state sanctioned same sex marriage Don t Know Refused Margin of error Sample Conducted by Polling typeJune 8 2017 June 18 2017 Less than weekly 75 20 5 1 619 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviewsAugust 5 2017 August 9 2017 Monthly 59 2 82 204 adults NBC News Wall Street Journal Live interviews and cell phone interviewsNever 80 288 adultsWeekly 34 384 adultsJune 8 2017 June 18 2017 Weekly or more 34 66 6 863 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviewsAugust 5 2017 August 9 2017 Yearly 70 2 82 312 adults NBC News Wall Street Journal Live interviews and cell phone interviewsRegional state and local level polls EditBy state federal district or territory Edit Date s conducted State federal district orterritory Favor state sanctioned same sex marriage Oppose state sanctioned same sex marriage Don t Know Refused Sample Conducted by Polling typeApril 5 2022 December 23 2022 Alabama 53 41 6 261 adults Public Religion Research Institute 1 Telephone interviews and cell phone interviewsAlaska 70 30 N A 160 adultsArizona 70 26 4 558 adultsArkansas 51 47 1 176 adultsCalifornia 72 26 2 2 295 adultsColorado 74 24 2 389 adultsConnecticut 81 18 1 274 adultsDelaware 69 29 2 164 adultsFlorida 69 28 3 1 457 adultsGeorgia 62 36 3 601 adultsHawaii 69 30 1 157 adultsIdaho 64 36 N A 167 adultsIllinois 77 20 2 740 adultsIndiana 67 31 1 414 adultsIowa 75 20 4 218 adultsKansas 69 30 1 177 adultsKentucky 57 42 1 516 adultsLouisiana 62 36 2 214 adultsMaine 82 19 N A 167 adultsMaryland 71 26 2 401 adultsMassachusetts 83 12 4 446 adultsMichigan 68 30 2 715 adultsMinnesota 77 21 2 403 adultsMississippi 49 48 4 178 adultsMissouri 63 36 1 406 adultsMontana 70 29 1 164 adultsNebraska 60 33 6 163 adultsNevada 78 20 2 196 adultsNew Hampshire 82 17 1 182 adultsNew Jersey 76 21 3 590 adultsNew Mexico 72 28 1 527 adultsNew York 75 21 3 1 133 adultsNorth Carolina 65 34 2 686 adultsNorth Dakota 66 34 1 157 adultsOhio 70 28 2 837 adultsOklahoma 54 44 2 200 adultsOregon 78 22 N A 325 adultsPennsylvania 68 29 3 979 adultsRhode Island 80 14 6 157 adultsSouth Carolina 55 40 6 304 adultsSouth Dakota 63 37 1 156 adultsTennessee 52 44 4 436 adultsTexas 62 36 2 1 611 adultsUtah 65 34 1 193 adultsVermont 70 29 N A 156 adultsVirginia 74 24 2 652 adultsWashington 83 15 2 583 adultsWest Virginia 62 38 1 156 adultsWisconsin 72 26 2 466 adultsWyoming 62 38 N A 161 adultsDistrict of Columbia 78 17 4 160 adults Public Religion Research InstituteBy metro area Edit Date s conducted Metro area Favor state sanctioned same sex marriage Oppose state sanctioned same sex marriage Don t Know Refused Sample Conducted by Polling typeJanuary 7 2020 December 20 2020 Albany 83 9 8 185 adults Public Religion Research Institute Telephone and cell phone interviews 101 Albuquerque 81 11 7 174 adultsAllentown 63 35 1 155 adultsAtlanta 62 34 5 1 070 adultsAustin 74 23 3 266 adultsBaltimore 68 27 6 460 adultsBirmingham 65 35 0 194 adultsBoston 80 16 4 674 adultsBuffalo 43 46 10 206 adultsCharlotte 63 30 7 383 adultsChicago 71 25 4 1 167 adultsCincinnati 70 27 3 358 adultsCleveland 89 6 5 330 adultsColumbus 62 35 3 360 adultsDallas 73 22 5 922 adultsDenver 80 15 5 508 adultsDetroit 69 24 6 728 adultsFresno 51 44 5 126 adultsGrand Rapids 53 45 2 149 adultsHartford 89 11 0 187 adultsHouston 67 29 4 782 adultsIndianapolis 69 25 6 393 adultsJacksonville 86 11 3 270 adultsKansas City 58 35 7 280 adultsKnoxville 63 29 7 155 adultsLas Vegas 77 19 4 317 adultsLos Angeles 70 25 5 781 adultsLouisville 79 13 8 229 adultsMemphis 73 22 5 160 adultsMiami 81 15 4 974 adultsMilwaukee 76 24 0 245 adultsMinneapolis St Paul 79 17 5 587 adultsNashville 80 15 5 262 adultsNew Orleans 68 31 0 168 adultsNew York City 67 28 5 3 004 adultsOklahoma City 62 30 8 188 adultsOmaha 86 14 0 149 adultsOrlando 77 16 7 446 adultsPhiladelphia 70 23 7 937 adultsPhoenix 66 27 7 724 adultsPittsburgh 80 18 1 427 adultsPortland 76 17 6 464 adultsProvidence 62 32 6 212 adultsRaleigh 46 45 10 232 adultsRichmond 74 20 7 189 adultsRiverside 73 19 8 544 adultsRochester 71 26 3 170 adultsSacramento 73 26 1 348 adultsSalt Lake City 58 38 3 209 adultsSan Antonio 71 16 12 326 adultsSan Diego 82 18 1 461 adultsSan Francisco 78 21 1 703 adultsSan Jose 86 13 2 220 adultsSeattle 73 23 5 656 adultsSt Louis 68 25 6 400 adultsTampa St Petersburg 70 26 4 566 adultsTucson 82 7 10 194 adultsVirginia Beach 65 20 16 316 adultsWashington D C 71 25 4 1 174 adultsBy region Edit Date s conducted Region Favor state sanctioned same sex marriage Support state sanctioned same sex marriage Oppose state sanctioned same sex marriage Don t Know Refused No answer Margin of error Sample Conducted by Polling typeApril 5 2017 December 23 2017 Midwest 62 31 8 0 6 Public Religion Research Institute Telephone interviews and cell phone interviewsAugust 5 2017 August 9 2017 53 2 82 NBC News Wall Street Journal Live interviews and cell phone interviewsJune 8 2017 June 18 2017 62 33 6 552 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviewsApril 5 2017 December 23 2017 Northeast 69 23 8 0 6 Public Religion Research Institute Telephone interviews and cell phone interviewsAugust 5 2017 August 9 2017 70 2 82 NBC News Wall Street Journal Live interviews and cell phone interviewsJune 8 2017 June 18 2017 73 23 4 432 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviewsMarch 12 2018 March 25 2018 South a 55 42 3 2 4 4 132 adult residents NBC News SurveyMonkey Online surveyApril 5 2017 December 23 2017 West 66 26 9 0 6 Public Religion Research Institute Telephone interviews and cell phone interviewsAugust 5 2017 August 9 2017 67 2 82 NBC News Wall Street Journal Live interviews and cell phone interviewsJune 8 2017 June 18 2017 68 28 4 577 adults Pew Research Center Landline telephone interviews and cell phone interviewsSee also Edit nbsp LGBT portal nbsp United States portalPublic opinion of interracial marriage in the United States LGBT rights in the United States Societal attitudes toward homosexuality United States Equality Act United States Public opinionNotes Edit Alabama Arkansas Florida Georgia Louisiana Mississippi North Carolina South Carolina Tennessee Texas and VirginiaReferences Edit a b PRRI American Values Atlas ava prri org Retrieved March 24 2023 a b Garretson Jeremiah 2018 A Transformed Society LGBT Rights in the United States The Path to Gay Rights How Activism and Coming Out Changed Public Opinion New York University Press ISBN 9781479850075 In the late 1980s and early 1990s a dramatic wave began to form in the waters of public opinion American attitudes involving homosexuality began to change The transformation of America s response to homosexuality has been and continues to be one of the most rapid and sustained shifts in mass attitudes since the start of public polling a b Dueling Realities Amid Multiple Crises Trump and Biden Supporters See Different Priorities and Futures for the Nation PRRI October 19 2020 Retrieved October 22 2020 The vast majority of Americans 70 favor allowing gay and lesbian couples to marry legally compared to 28 of Americans who oppose it Majorities of Democrats 80 and independents 76 as well as half of Republicans 50 support same sex marriage Lopez German June 26 2015 Same sex marriage in the US explained Vox Retrieved March 1 2023 Staff GSS Data Explorer Homosexuals should have right to marry 18 34 General Social Survey Retrieved March 4 2023 Opinion on Same Sex Marriage Appears to Shift at Accelerated Pace FiveThirtyEight May 19 2016 a b Changing Attitudes on Gay Marriage Pew Research Center s Religion amp Public Life Project July 29 2015 Archived from the original on November 27 2013 Retrieved October 8 2015 a b Staff March 23 2023 More Acceptance but Growing Polarization on LGBTQ Rights Findings From the 2022 American Values Atlas Public Religion Research Institute Retrieved March 23 2023 a b Staff August 1 2023 Cross Tabs July 2023 Times Siena Poll of the 2024 Race and National Issues The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved August 2 2023 Atitiudes about Homosexuality amp Gay Marriage PDF May 17 2005 Archived from the original PDF on May 17 2005 History ONE Archives Foundation www onearchives org Zeitz Josh The Making of the Marriage Equality Revolution Politico Archived from the original on June 2 2020 Retrieved April 5 2018 Opinion on Same Sex Marriage Appears to Shift at Accelerated Pace August 12 2010 PEW RESEARCH CENTER FOR THE PEOPLE amp THE PRESS MAY 2008 POLITICAL BELIEVABILITY SURVEY FINAL TOPLINE May 21 25 2008 PDF Changing Views on Social Issues Allemande Left Allemande Right PDF ABC News August 2010 CNN poll PDF a b Poll 60 percent of likely voters back gay marriage POLITICO February 13 2015 Retrieved October 8 2015 a b Two in Three Americans Support Same Sex Marriage Gallup May 23 2018 Bump Philip February 21 2019 Republicans would least like their kids to marry a transgender person For Democrats A Republican Washington Post Retrieved February 22 2019 U S Same Sex Marriage Support Holds at 71 High June 5 2023 a b Staff September 14 2007 LGBT Rights Gallup Inc Retrieved March 1 2023 Chatelle Theia January 16 2023 Is the Respect for Marriage Act a Win for the Right The Nation ISSN 0027 8378 Retrieved January 18 2023 Staff December 14 2022 Lowest Opinion Of Trump Among Voters In Seven Years Quinnipiac University National Poll Finds Biden Approval Rating Climbs Quinnipiac University Poll Quinnipiac University Retrieved December 15 2022 September 20 25 2022 Grinnell College National Poll PDF FiveThirtyEight September 28 2022 Retrieved November 16 2022 Majority of Americans Believe Abortion and Same Sex Marriage Should be Guaranteed Rights Grinnell College Grinnell College September 28 2022 Retrieved September 28 2022 Solid majorities across both parties agree that marrying someone of the same sex are rights that should be guaranteed to all citizens McCarthy Justin June 1 2022 Same Sex Marriage Support Inches Up to New High of 71 Gallup Retrieved July 22 2022 De Pinto Jennifer June 22 2021 CBS News poll Despite progress most Americans say LGBTQ discrimination still exists CBS News Retrieved October 16 2021 McCarthy Justin June 8 2021 Record High 70 in U S Support Same Sex Marriage Gallup Retrieved June 8 2021 Bump Philip November 17 2022 The Simple Reason Republican Senators Voted Against Same Sex Marriage The Washington Post Retrieved November 21 2022 De Pinto Jennifer June 24 2019 50 years after Stonewall Most see progress in ending LGBTQ discrimination CBS News Retrieved June 25 2019 Caspani Maria June 11 2019 Americans perception of LGBTQ rights under federal law largely incorrect Reuters Ipsos Reuters Retrieved June 25 2019 Majority of Public Favors Same Sex Marriage but Divisions Persist Pew Research Center May 14 2019 Retrieved June 25 2019 U S Support for Gay Marriage Stable at 63 Gallup com May 22 2019 NBC News poll PDF NBC News April 12 2018 Archived from the original PDF on April 12 2018 Retrieved April 17 2018 NBC News poll The South once a conservative bastion is changing NBC News April 12 2018 PRRI American Values Atlas Public Religion Research Institute 2017 Sopelsa Brookie September 6 2017 Record Percentage of Americans Support Gay Marriage Poll Finds NBC News Retrieved September 6 2017 August 5 9 2017 NBC News Wall Street Journal Survey PDF MSNBC September 6 2017 Archived from the original PDF on September 6 2017 Retrieved September 6 2017 Support for Same Sex Marriage Grows Even Among Groups That Had Been Skeptical Pew Research Center June 26 2017 US Support for Gay Marriage Edges to New High Gallup May 15 2017 Americans Support for Gay Marriage Remains High at 61 Gallup May 19 2016 Record High 60 of Americans Support Same Sex Marriage Gallup May 19 2015 Hook Janet March 9 2015 Support for Gay Marriage Hits All Time High WSJ NBC News Poll The Wall Street Journal Retrieved October 8 2015 CNN poll 63 percent of Americans say same sex couples have a right to marry LGBTQ Nation February 20 2015 Retrieved October 8 2015 Same Sex Marriage Support Reaches New High at 55 Gallup May 21 2014 Retrieved May 22 2014 Other Policy Debates in 2014 Same sex Marriage Health Care and Minimum Wage PDF Pew Research Center February 2014 Political Survey PDF Retrieved October 28 2014 Majority of young conservatives accept same sex marriage Retrieved March 21 2014 Anti gay marriage sentiment fading Washington Post Retrieved April 22 2014 Young Republicans favor same sex marriage Pew Research Center Pew Research Center March 10 2014 Retrieved October 8 2015 Craighill Peyton M Clement Scott March 5 2014 Support for same sex marriage hits new high half say Constitution guarantees right The Washington Post Retrieved March 5 2014 Washington Post ABC News poll March 2014 Politics Obama and 2014 midterms Washington Post Retrieved March 5 2014 A Shifting Landscape A Decade of Change in American Attitudes about Same Sex Marriage and LGBT Issues Public Religion Research Institute December 2013 Retrieved February 27 2014 Margin of error 1 7 a b Civil Rights pollingreport com Retrieved October 8 2015 National US Poll October 4 2013 U S Catholics Back Pope On Ch Quinnipiac University Connecticut Quinnipiac University Retrieved October 8 2015 In U S 52 Back Law to Legalize Gay Marriage in 50 States Gallup July 29 2013 Retrieved October 8 2015 New Poll Marriage Equality Support at Record High in Wake of SCOTUS Ruling retrieved July 6 2013 Gay Rights Poll ABC News Washington Post Survey Finds Support For Same Sex Marriage Ending Boy Scout Ban retrieved May 30 2013 Dutton Sarah De Pinto Jennifer Salvanto Anthony Backus Fred March 26 2013 Poll 53 of Americans support same sex marriage CBS News Retrieved May 14 2022 Growing Support for Gay Marriage Changed Minds and Changing Demographics Pew Research March 20 2013 Retrieved May 14 2022 Cohen Jon March 18 2013 Gay marriage support hits new high in Post ABC poll The Washington Post Retrieved May 14 2022 National US Poll March 8 2013 American Catholics Support Sam Quinnipiac University Connecticut Quinnipiac University Archived from the original on March 15 2013 Retrieved October 8 2015 Religion Big Factor for Americans Against Same Sex Marriage Gallup com December 5 2012 Retrieved May 14 2022 Pinto Jennifer Condon Stephanie November 30 2012 Poll 51 percent support same sex marriage CBS News Retrieved May 14 2022 Majority Supports Path to Citizenship Greater Division on Other Social Issues Retrieved November 17 2012 Pruitt Bill June 6 2012 Majority of Americans support legalizing same sex marriage poll shows yahoo com Archived from the original on June 7 2012 Retrieved June 6 2012 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link archived here Americans increase support of marriage equality retrieved May 23 2012 After President Obama s announcement Opposition to same sex marriage hits record low The Washington Post Accessed May 23 2012 Poll Report Strong Support for Gay Marriage Now Exceeds Strong Opposition Langer Research Association langerresearch com accessed May 23 2012 Stein Sam May 9 2012 Obama Backs Gay Marriage The Huffington Post Most Popular E mail Newsletter USA Today May 11 2012 Half of Americans Support Legal Gay Marriage May 8 2012 Retrieved May 12 2012 Survey Majority of Americans Do Not Believe Religious Liberty is Under Attack Publicreligion org March 2012 Retrieved March 15 2012 Study 12202 NBC News Wall Street Journal Survey PDF Archived from the original PDF on August 9 2012 Retrieved August 28 2012 a b The Pew Research Center for the People amp the Press Attitudes Toward Social Issues People press org March 3 2011 Retrieved March 15 2012 a b For First Time Majority of Americans Favor Legal Gay Marriage Gallup com May 20 2011 Retrieved March 15 2012 ABC News Washington Post poll same sex marriage March 18 2011 PDF ABC News March 2011 Retrieved March 15 2012 a b CNN Opinion Research April 9 10 2011 PDF April 19 2011 Retrieved March 15 2012 Democracy Corps poll March 2011 PDF Democracy Corps March 2011 Archived from the original PDF on March 14 2012 Retrieved March 15 2012 The AP National Constitution Center Poll Aug 11 16 2010 PDF August 2010 Retrieved March 15 2012 CNN Opinion Research Aug 6 10 2010 PDF August 2010 Retrieved March 15 2012 Washington Post ABC News washingtonpost com www washingtonpost com Retrieved August 8 2023 Jones Jeffrey May 24 2010 Americans Opposition to Gay Marriage Eases Slightly Gallup com Retrieved May 14 2022 http www publicpolicypolling com pdf PPP Release National 813 pdf PPP Poll August 13 2010 CNN 2010 Exit Polls CNN November 2010 Retrieved March 15 2012 Changing Views on Social Issues Allemande Left Allemande Right PDF ABC News CBS Bay Area Breaking Local News First Alert Weather amp Sports cbs5 com Archived from the original on April 29 2009 Silver Nate April 30 2009 Two National Polls for First Time Show Plurality Support for Gay Marriage FiveThirtyEight Retrieved December 12 2010 LifeWay Research Rainer Millennials study LifeWay September 7 2010 Archived from the original on September 7 2010 Americans Divided on Same Sex Legal Rights Angus Reid Global Monitor Angus reid com December 4 2008 Archived from the original on May 5 2009 Retrieved March 15 2012 a b American Voters Oppose Same Sex Marriage Quinnipiac University National Poll Finds But They Don t Want Government To Ban It Quinnipiac edu July 17 2008 Archived from the original on October 17 2011 Retrieved March 15 2012 U S Divided on Homosexual Couples Angus Reid Global Monitor Angus reid com July 13 2008 Archived from the original on February 28 2010 Retrieved March 15 2012 Saad Lydia May 22 2006 Americans Still Oppose Gay Marriage Gallup com Retrieved May 14 2022 Less Opposition to Gay Marriage Adoption and Military Service March 22 2006 Retrieved September 21 2007 Buchanan Wyatt March 23 2006 Poll finds U S warming to gay marriage Opposition off 12 since 04 support for adoption military role is up nationally SFGATE Retrieved May 14 2022 MAY POLITICAL BELIEVABILITY SURVEY PDF Retrieved July 16 2008 Should Gays Have Marriage Rights PDF Cross national Differences in Attitudes towards Homosexuality PDF Archived from the original PDF on November 16 2017 Retrieved April 4 2018 Public attitudes towards homosexuality September 2011 PDF PRRI 2020 American Values Survey PDF 2020 2020 Methodology American Values Atlas ava prri org Retrieved May 23 2023 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Public opinion of same sex marriage in the United States amp oldid 1180527799, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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