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Gallup's Top Well-Being Discoveries of 2016

Gallup editors highlight the most important health and well-being findings from the Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index in 2016.

Life Evaluations of LGBT Americans Decline After Election

LGBT adults' outlook on life decreased from 51% "thriving" before the U.S. presidential election to 41% after it. Steep declines also occurred among Democrats in general.

Eight Things We Learned in This Election

Gallup's Editor-in-Chief reports on eight things we learned from the American people during the presidential campaign of 2016.

Which Issues Are the Most Critical for Trump, Clinton?

As the presidential campaign reaches the home stretch, terrorism and immigration for Donald Trump -- and race relations and the role of government for Hillary Clinton -- may be the highest return-on-investment areas for each to discuss.

LGBT Community Still Views Clinton More Favorably Than Trump

LGBT Americans view Hillary Clinton more favorably than her rival Donald Trump. Unlike the general population, differences in candidate favorability by race and ethnicity are not present among LGBT adults.

Mike Pence Shows Greater Gains in Favorability Than Tim Kaine

Favorable ratings of vice presidential nominees Mike Pence and Tim Kaine are rising, but Pence's gains have been more substantial than Kaine's since their respective nominating conventions.

Same-Sex Marriages Up One Year After Supreme Court Verdict

Roughly half of cohabiting same-sex couples in the U.S. are married as opposed to living in a domestic partnership. That is up from 38% before the U.S. Supreme Court legalized same-sex marriage nationwide a year ago.

Race, Gender Biggest Differentiators in Views of Clinton, Trump

Race, ethnicity, gender and marital status are among the most powerful demographic differentiators in views of Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump.

Gallup Analysis: Millennials, Marriage and Family

According to a Gallup analysis, millennials in the U.S. are delaying marriage longer than any other generation before them, though they do intend to marry and eventually have children.

Americans' Support for Gay Marriage Remains High, at 61%

Sixty-one percent of Americans say that marriages between same-sex couples should be recognized by the law as valid, consistent with the 58% and 60% recorded in 2015.
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