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After decades of rising support, same-sex marriage acceptance may be stalling, Gallup poll shows

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After decades of rising support, same-sex marriage acceptance may be stalling, Gallup poll shows
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Acceptance of same-sex marriage and relationships in the US has flattened after more than two decades of steadily increasing support, with an ongoing decline among Republicans, according to a new Gallup poll.About 65 per cent of US adults believe same-sex marriage should be legal, down slightly from 71 per cent in 2022 and 2023.

After decades of rising support, same-sex marriage acceptance may be stalling, Gallup poll shows An LGBTQ+ pride flag flies beneath a U.S. flag at the Stonewall National Monument in New York, on Oct 11, 2017.

Acceptance of same-sex marriage and relationships in the US has flattened after more than two decades of steadily increasing support, with an ongoing decline among Republicans, according to a new Gallup poll. About 65 per cent of US adults believe same-sex marriage should be legal, down slightly from 71 per cent in 2022 and 2023. Most of the change is due to dropping acceptance among Republicans.

In the new survey, which was conducted in May, only 37 per cent of Republicans say same-sex marriage should be legally valid, while 35 per cent say gay and lesbian relations are "morally acceptable". The views of Democrats and independents are largely stable in the findings released Wednesday, with most in both groups saying same-sex marriage should be legal and that gay or lesbian relations are moral.

The widening partisan divide is also reflected in policy around LGBTQ+ issues across the US, particularly regarding transgender people, and a rising push in some states to ban same-sex marriage. The downtick in support for same-sex marriage, while slight, is still striking because of how dramatically American views on the issue have shifted over the past few decades. According to Gallup's trend data, only 27 per cent of US adults supported legal same-sex marriage in 1996.

Since then, support for same-sex marriage rose steadily until a few years ago, when it peaked with around seven in 10 US adults saying same-sex marriage should be legal. Opinion about the morality of same-sex relationships followed the same pattern. About four in 10 US adults said same-sex relations were morally acceptable in 2001. That increased nearly 30 percentage points over the next two decades.

Over the past few years, Gallup's data has shown signs of a shift in the other direction. In addition to the slight decline on same-sex marriage, the new poll also found that 62 per cent of US adults view gay and lesbian relations as morally acceptable, down from 71 per cent in 2022. Same-sex marriage has been recognised nationally since a 2015 Supreme Court ruling.

That case capped a 12-year run in which court rulings and state laws recognised it in most states. By last year, there were more than 800,000 married same-sex couples, according to data compiled by the Williams Institute at the University of California Los Angeles School of Law. The pushback has never stopped, though. A call to overturn the 2015 reached the Supreme Court last year, invoking the words of Justice Clarence Thomas, who has called for undoing it.

The court turned away the appeal without comment. Last year, the Southern Baptist Convention overwhelmingly called for reversing the ruling that led to nationwide marriage recognition and imposing a ban. Lawmakers in at least 11 states introduced legislation for their current or most recent sessions calling on a ban on same-sex marriage, according to an Associated Press analysis of bills compiled by the legislation tracking service Plural. Most didn't pick up momentum.

But the Tennessee House passed a measure to allow private citizens and organisations not to recognise the unions; Idaho's House passed a resolution calling on the Supreme Court to undo the 2015 decision. A similar number of states have had measures aimed at protecting same-sex marriage introduced recently.

In a sign that views of LGBTQ+ issues may be shifting more broadly, the new Gallup poll found that about 4 in 10 Americans view changing one's gender as morally acceptable, down from nearly half in 2021. Most Republican-controlled states have adopted laws in the last five years to bar gender-affirming medical treatments for transgender minors, restrict which school bathrooms transgender people may use and bar transgender girls and women from some sports competitions.

This week, one of those policies suffered a blow when a court ruled that the military illegally banned transgender troops.

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