GALLUP POLL MAY 09: Majority of Americans Continue to Oppose Gay Marriage

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    May 27, 2009

    Majority of Americans Continue to Oppose Gay MarriageNo change in support from last year

    by Jeffrey M. Jones

    PRINCETON, NJ -- Americans' views on same-sex marriage have essentially stayed the same in the

    past year, with a majority of 57% opposed to granting such marriages legal status and 40% in favor of

    doing so. Though support for legal same-sex marriage is significantly higher now than when Gallup first

    asked about it in 1996, in recent years support has appeared to stall, peaking at 46% in 2007.

    The lack of change in public opinion on same-sex marriage seen in the newUSA Today/Gallup poll

    occurs in an environment in which an increasing number of states have taken steps to legalize such

    unions. Same-sex marriages are now legal in Massachusetts, Connecticut, Maine, and Iowa, and will be

    legal in Vermont in September.

    On Tuesday, California's Supreme Court refused to add that state to the list, by upholding the

    Proposition 8 referendum, approved by voters, that banned same-sex marriage in the state. The

    referendum was put on the November 2008 ballot in response to an earlier court decision that allowed

    same-sex couples to legally marry in California.

    Among major demographic or attitudinal subgroups, self-identified liberals show the greatest support

    for legal gay marriage at 75% in the May 7-10 poll. By contrast, only 19% of conservatives think

    same-sex marriages should be legally valid.

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    Just a slim majority (55%) of Democrats approve of gay marriage, but they are more likely to do so than

    independents (45%) and Republicans (20%).

    Younger Americans have typically been much more supportive of same-sex marriage than olderAmericans, and that is the case in the current poll. A majority of 18- to 29-year-olds think gay or lesbian

    couples should be allowed to legally marry, while support reaches only as high as 40% among the three

    older age groups.

    A separate question in the poll found close to half of Americans, 48%, saying that allowing legal

    same-sex marriages would change society for the worse. That is more than three times the 13% whobelieve legal gay marriage would change society for the better. The remaining 38% say it would have no

    effect on society or do not have an opinion on the matter.

    These results are essentially unchanged from a Gallup Poll conducted six years ago.

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    Support Higher for Gay Rights Not Involving Marriage

    Though Americans seem reluctant to endorse gay marriage, the poll finds most Americans supportinggay rights in a variety of other areas.

    In an update of a question Gallup has asked since 1977, a majority of 56% of Americans say gay or

    lesbian relations between consenting adults should be legal. A plurality (if not a majority) of the public

    has taken this view all but one time Gallup has asked the question this decade.

    Americans' views about allowing gay men and lesbians to serve in the military have undergone a major

    shift since Bill Clinton attempted to change military policy early in his administration. No more than

    43% of Americans favored military service by openly gay soldiers in 1993, according several NBC

    News/Wall Street Journalpolls conducted that year. Clinton and the military eventually compromised

    on the so-called "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" policy that allowed gays to serve as long as they did not disclose

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    their sexual orientation.

    Today, the latest USA Today/Gallup poll finds 69% of Americans in favor of military service by openly

    gay men and lesbians. While the Clinton-era policy remains in place, President Obama promised during

    the campaign to change it.

    Americans also show broad support for gay rights in the following areas:

    Sixty-seven percent say gay and lesbian domestic partners should have access to health insurance

    and other employee benefits.

    Nearly three in four Americans, 73%, believe gay and lesbian domestic partners should have

    inheritance rights.

    Sixty-seven percent favor a proposal to expand hate-crime laws to cover crimes committed against

    gays or lesbians.

    Only 28% of Americans believe that gays or lesbians should not be hired as elementary school

    teachers. Sixty-nine percent believe they should be allowed to teach children.

    Americans are somewhat less supportive of adoption rights for gay couples, though a majority (54%)still support this. The current level of support does represent an increase fromNewsweek polls

    conducted in 2002 (46%) and 2004 (45%).

    Implications

    While Americans have become increasingly likely to believe that the law should not discriminate

    against gay individuals and gay couples, the public still seems reluctant at this point to extend those

    protections to the institution of marriage. Public support for gay marriage appears to have stalled in the

    last two years, even as the gay marriage movement has scored a number of legal and legislative victories

    at the state level in the past year.

    In addition to the states that have recently legalized gay marriage, New Hampshire and New York are

    currently considering legislation to make gay marriage legal in their states. The California Supreme

    Court ruling announced Tuesday is a significant setback for the gay rights movement; however, it is

    possible for voters to undo Proposition 8 by passing a new referendum.

    Clearly, much of the action on gay marriage policy is taking place at the state level. President Obama

    personally does not support gay marriage, but believes that states should decide the matter for

    themselves. Thus, he seems unlikely to seek a national standard. State courts have obviously played an

    important part in deciding gay marriage laws; at this point it is not known whether the issue will makeits way to the U.S. Supreme Court in the future.

    Survey Methods

    Results are based on telephone interviews with 1,015 national adults, aged 18 and older, conducted May

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    7-10, 2009. For results based on the total sample of national adults, one can say with 95% confidence

    that the maximum margin of sampling error is 3 percentage points.

    Interviews are conducted with respondents on land-line telephones (for respondents with a land-line

    telephone) and cellular phones (for respondents who are cell-phone only).

    In addition to sampling error, question wording and practical difficulties in conducting surveys can

    introduce error or bias into the findings of public opinion polls.

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