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Public’s Shift on Same-Sex Marriage Was Swift, Broad

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A major shift in public opinion happened between 1990 in the public's perception and tolerance of gay people and gay marraige. Support for gay marraige in Journal/NBC News polling shows young people, especially people 18-34 year old, were leading the way. In this group support for gay marraigne increased from 47% in 2009 to 57% in 2012, going up to 74% in March 2015. The increase is also shown in suburban residents, political independents, Midwesterners and Hispanics. A key factor in the change is that many people now know of one person in their work or personal lives who is gay. Technology, television and internet media also helped changed attitudes. In 1990 7 of 8 Americans said sexual relations between the same sex were wrong. In 2004 only 3 of ten Americans supported same sex marraige. A vote in Maine shows the dramatic shift- in 2009 same sex marraige was rejected by 53%, in 2012 53% approved it. The change in attitudes is faster than happened for miscegenation, which took 30 years after the Supreme Court ruled against anti-miscegenation laws to reach a point where a majority of Americans approved marraiges between black and white people. The Supreme Court's 5-4 decision on June 25, 2015, now makes gay marraige legal in all 50 states, and strikes down bans in Michigan, Ohio, Kentucky, and Tennessee. Yet there are a significant number of Americans who do not favor same sex marraige especially in southern states such as Texas, Kentucky, South Carolina, Tennessee, Alabama. A Pew Research Center poll shows 73% of white evangelical Protestants do not approve of same sex marraige. Other groups who do not favor same sex marraige in the Pew polling are conservatives and persons born before the post World War baby boom.

Shift in American public opinion towards gay rights and tolerance for same sex marraige in the U.S. 1990-2015

06/21/2015

Justice Anthony Kennedy writes in his majority ruling that the question of gay rights came before the court after a "shift in public attitudes towards greater tolerance." Kennedy says changes in society and culture have led to this development, even though the Supreme Court based its 5-4 decision on the 14th Amendment guranteeing equal protection and due process under the law.

Grouped Articles

Public’s Shift on Same-Sex Marriage Was Swift, Broad

Wall Street Journal 06/27/2015

Justice Anthony Kennedy’s Tolerance Is Seen in His Sacramento Roots

New York Times 06/21/2015

Kentucky clerk Kim Davis claims private meeting with Pope Francis - The Washington Post

Washington Post 09/30/2015

Media coverage on the U.S. Supreme Court's 5-4 decision in 2015 on gay rights and same-sex marraige

06/21/2015

Grouped Articles

Justice Kennedy’s Bitter Truth

Wall Street Journal 06/30/2015

Public’s Shift on Same-Sex Marriage Was Swift, Broad

Wall Street Journal 06/27/2015

A Liberal But Restrained Supreme Court Term

Wall Street Journal 07/01/2015

Justice Anthony Kennedy’s Tolerance Is Seen in His Sacramento Roots

New York Times 06/21/2015

The High Court’s Disunited State

Wall Street Journal 07/03/2015

Kentucky clerk Kim Davis claims private meeting with Pope Francis - The Washington Post

Washington Post 09/30/2015


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