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Moral Acceptance of Polygamy at Record High -- But Why?
Why is polygamy, which remains illegal in all 50 states, becoming permissible to an increasing percentage of the country?
Percentage of Christians in U.S. Drifting Down, but Still High
Three-quarters of Americans identify with a Christian religion, down from 80% eight years ago and from the mid-90s in the 1950s. About 5% in the U.S. identify with a non-Christian religion; 20% have no formal religious identification.
20 Gallup Trends to Watch in 2025
Keep up with how Americans react to the Trump administration and how society evolves with key Gallup trends.
Fewer Americans Back Businesses Wading Into Current Events
Gallup and Bentley University find that 41% of U.S. adults favor businesses taking a public stance on current events, down from 48% last year.
More Americans View Moderate Drinking as Unhealthy
The 39% of Americans who think drinking in moderation is unhealthy is an 11-percentage-point increase since 2018 and is largely due to a shift in young adults' views.
A Look at Southern Baptists in the U.S. Today
Southern Baptists, meeting in Nashville for their annual convention, remain the largest Protestant denomination in the U.S.
Confidence in Religion at New Low, but Not Among Catholics
Americans' confidence in organized religion has dropped dramatically over the past four decades, hitting an all-time low this year of 42%. While Protestants' confidence in the church is also at a new low, Catholics' has stabilized.
Religiosity Playing an Expected Role in Views of Trump
Highly religious Americans give Donald Trump higher job approval ratings than those who are not religious -- an expected pattern, given the relationship between religiosity and partisanship in politics today.
U.S. Satisfaction Sinks With Many Aspects of Public Life
Gallup's annual update on Americans' satisfaction with seven broad aspects of the way the U.S. functions finds these perceptions at their lowest in two decades of measurement.
Migrant Acceptance in Canada, U.S. Follows Political Lines
Canada and the U.S. are both among the top 10 most-accepting countries in the world for migrants, but Canadians are more open to migrants than their neighbors.