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Satisfaction With Acceptance of Gays in U.S. at New High
A new high of 60% of Americans say they are satisfied with the acceptance of gays and lesbians in the U.S. -- up from 53% in 2014 and 2015. Majorities of Republicans, Democrats and independents are satisfied.
The 2015 Year in Review at Gallup.com
Gallup reviews the top stories of 2015, including Americans' views of Bernie Sanders and the Tea Party movement, what employees want from their managers and how government became the most important problem in the U.S.
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.
Gallup Week-in-Review
Read about how President Barack Obama's State of the Union compared to Americans' priorities, Pakistanis' growing disapproval of U.S. leadership, and the first estimates of LGBT identification by state in this week's review.
Attitudes About Local News Mostly Stable Amid COVID-19
Americans are paying more attention to local news and rate its coronavirus coverage positively, but most of their fundamental attitudes about local news are not improving.
State of the States 2012
Gallup.com's annual State of the States series will start to roll out next week. Every year we do a deep dive analysis of Gallup Daily tracking data at the state level and publish articles and data on key political, economic, and well-being ...
Gallup Vault: Issue of Gays in Military Split Americans in 1993
In 1993, Americans had a mixed response to easing restrictions on gays serving in the military, and both sides felt strongly about their view.
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.
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.
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.