skip to main content

Search Results

Showing 1-10 of 200 results.

LGBTQ+ Identification in U.S. Now at 7.6%

LGBTQ+ identification in the U.S. continues to inch up, with 7.6% of all U.S. adults, and more than one in five Gen Z adults, identifying this way.

Americans Offer Anemic State of the Nation Report

Since President Joe Biden took office, Americans' satisfaction with specific aspects of the country has mostly stalled or diminished, falling most on the nation's military strength, immigration, gun policy and energy policy.

Felonies, Old Age Heavily Count Against Candidates

Americans are more likely to say they would back certain types of presidential candidates, such as a woman or Black adult, than others, such as a Muslim or socialist. But being older than 80 or having been charged with a felony are much bigger ...

Fear of Discrimination Deters LGBT Americans From Fostering

LGBT Americans are more interested than non-LGBT adults in fostering or adoption, and are facing discrimination as a major barrier, reveals a 2023 Kidsave-Gallup study.

Fertility, Marriage and the Power of Social Norms

Despite declining fertility and marriage rates, Americans want to have children and to be married.

Views of Supreme Court Remain Near Record Lows

Americans' approval of the Supreme Court and their trust in it remain low. The public is divided on whether its ideology is "about right" or "too conservative."

Supreme Court Approval Holds at Record Low

Forty percent of Americans approve of the job the U.S. Supreme Court is doing, unchanged from the record low measured last fall.

Public Opinion and Recent Supreme Court Decisions

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

LGB Gen Z Members More Anxious and Stressed Than Peers

Gallup and Walton Family Foundation find LGB Gen Z adults face heightened anxiety, sadness, stress and loneliness compared with their peers.

Majority Worldwide Now Say Their Area Is Good for Gay People

For the first time in Gallup World Poll's trend dating back to 2006, a majority of people (52%) worldwide say their city or area is a "good place" for gay or lesbian people to live.
  • 1 (current page)
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4