1 of 2 | Supporters watch as local politicians and others raise an LGBTQ+ Pride flag in February at the Stonewall National Monument in New York City after the Trump administration had the National Park Service remove it earlier in the week. A Gallup poll released Wednesday shows people in the United States have pulled back from support of LGBTQ+ issues over the past few years. File Photo by John Angelillo/UPI | License Photo
June 3 (UPI) -- People in the United States have pulled back from support of LGBTQ+ issues over the past few years, with 65% percent showing support for same-sex marriage now as opposed to 71% in 2022-2023, a Gallup poll released Wednesday shows.
The percentage of U.S. residents saying that gay or lesbian relations are "morally acceptable" also fell to 62%, the lowest that percentage has been since 2016.
This comes after a surge in acceptance in the late 2010s and early 2020s. Gallup said that between 1996 and 2022, the percentage of those in favor of legal same-sex marriage increased from 27% to 71%. However, that percentage has declined since.
The poll (Gallup's annual Values and Beliefs survey) first asked about same-sex relationships and morality in 2001. Then, 40% percent said they were "morally acceptable." That percentage grew to 71% by 2022, dropping to 64% in 2023.










