skip to main content

Search Results

Showing 51-60 of 200 results.

U.S. Support for Gay Marriage Stable After High Court Ruling

Americans' views on gay marriage have not changed following the Supreme Court's ruling that bans on same-sex marriages are unconstitutional. About six in 10 Americans say gay marriages should be valid, similar to the percentage in May.

U.S. Public Opinion and the Election: Three Values Issues

Where does the public stand on abortion, critical race theory and gender identity issues?

LGBT Americans Married to Same-Sex Spouse Steady at 10%

Gallup finds that 10% of LGBT adults in the U.S. are married to a same-sex spouse, and another 6% live with a same-sex partner.

Public Opinion and Recent Supreme Court Decisions

Recent Supreme Court decisions may have conflicting impacts on Americans' overall opinion of the court.

Measuring Trends in Americans' Personal Values

Trends measuring Americans' values need to be analyzed in the context of differences in question wording and changes in methodology.

Alabama Verdict on Same-Sex Marriage Highlights Pending U.S. Supreme Court Ruling

The Alabama Supreme Court on Tuesday ordered probate judges in that state to stop issuing marriage licenses to same-sex couples, defying a U.S. District Court ruling that had overturned Alabama's ban on such marriages.

Same-Sex Marriages Up After Supreme Court Ruling

More LGBT Americans living with a same-sex partner now report being married (45%) than did so in the months prior to the Supreme Court decision to make same-sex marriages legal in all 50 states (38%).

Same-Sex Marriage Support Reaches New High at 55%

Amid several legal victories for gay marriage, Americans' support for it has reached new high of 55%, which includes increasing support among young adults.

Gallup Vault: Fidelity, Respect Rated Keys to Marital Bliss

In 1981, Americans rated faithfulness as the top feature of a successful marriage. Political agreement and having the same social background ranked last.

Record-Low 54% in U.S. Say Death Penalty Morally Acceptable

Fifty-four percent of Americans think the death penalty is morally acceptable, an all-time low in Gallup's 20-year trend.
  • 6 (current page)
  • 7
  • 8
  • 9