Americansâ€
But thereâ€
Gallup is the latest to show this:
- GOP support for same-sex marriage has declined from a high of 55 percent in both 2021 and 2022, to 49 percent in 2023 and now to 46 percent today — a nine-point drop over two years.
- Over that same span, the percentage of Republicans describing same-sex relations as “morally acceptable� has declined from 56 percent to 40 percent — a 16-point drop.
Those are the biggest drops in the decades-long history of Gallup polling these issues.
Before the last two years, there had been only one year with a decline in GOP support for same-sex marriage since the Supreme Court legalized it in 2015 in Obergefell v. Hodges. And the percentage of Republicans who accept the morality of same-sex relations is now lower than itâ€
Importantly, the new data suggests the declines seen in Gallupâ€
The other extensive national poll to test these issues in recent months was the American Values Atlas from the Public Religion Research Institute.
It showed a more modest decline in GOP support for same-sex marriage — from 50 percent in 2020 and 49 percent in 2022 to 47 percent in 2023.
But thatâ€
- 34 percent opposed allowing small business owners to refuse to provide products or services to gays and lesbians. Thatâ€
s down from a high of over 40 percent and the lowest that number has been since Obergefell. - 59 percent favored laws protecting LGBTQ+ people from job, housing and public discrimination. Thatâ€
s down from 66 percent in 2022 and is also the lowest number since Obergefell.
Some of these polls show modest declines among Democrats on these questions — four points on each of the questions asked by Gallup, and less than that on the questions asked by PRRI. But the lionâ€
Overall, support for same-sex marriage is down two points off its previous highs in both surveys, at just shy of 7 in 10 Americans. Acceptance of same-sex relations is down seven points, to 64 percent, in the Gallup poll.
As noted, we donâ€
But the declines do make logical sense. The timing of them, after all, coincides with an increasing GOP appetite to wage culture wars that have often ensnared LGBTQ+ Americans. While Republicans largely moved away from talking about such issues post-Obergefell — recognizing that their party was on the losing end of them — thatâ€
Think the Florida “donâ€
As these issues were percolating in 2022, my Washington Post colleague Ellen McCarthy wrote about advocatesâ€
“Itâ€s frightening,â€� [former Human Rights Campaign executive director Vic] Basile said on a recent afternoon from the couch of his Chevy Chase apartment, and he†s not the only longtime LGBTQ activist watching with alarm. “Devastating,â€� is the word used by Hilary Rosen, the first lobbyist Basile hired at the Human Rights Campaign.“Scary,â€� says Imani Woody, a longtime activist for Black and elder gay rights.“Terrifying,â€� says Vivian Shapiro, a veteran activist and former co-chair of the Human Rights Campaign Fund, which raises money for the organization.“It gives me despair,â€� said Elizabeth Birch, who served as executive director of the HRC from 1995 to 2004. “We really, really have won the hearts and minds of the majority of Americans — this is a despairing setback.â€�…“The pendulum will eventually start to swing back,â€� Basile says. “But God knows how long it will take for that to happen and how much more damage will get done in the meantime.â€�
Two years later, thereâ€