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Artículo: Support for LGBTQ+ rights just dropped. It's not evenly spread

Support for LGBTQ+ rights just dropped. It's not evenly spread

For two decades, Gallup's tracking of American attitudes toward LGBTQ+ issues moved in one direction: up. That trend has now reversed, and the shift is not happening evenly across the political spectrum. It is concentrated almost entirely among Republican voters.

Four years ago, a majority of Republicans, 55%, said they supported same-sex marriage. That number is now 37%. On trans-specific questions the drop is sharper. Only 5% of Republicans now say changing one's gender is morally acceptable, down from 22% five years ago.

It is worth being precise about what this data does and doesn't say. It does not mean the country as a whole has turned against LGBTQ+ people. It means one half of the electorate has moved sharply in one direction while the other has largely held steady, and that gap is being reflected back through policy. Twenty-seven states have passed laws restricting transgender women from participating in women's sports over the past six years. The federal government has pulled back funding for global rights initiatives and HIV prevention programs central to the Trump administration's platform.

None of this happened in a vacuum. Rather it tracks with a deliberate campaign strategy, with tens of millions of dollars spent on anti-trans advertising during recent election cycles. Polling doesn't just measure opinion, it responds to what people are told repeatedly and by whom.

The useful takeaway here isn't despair. It's precision. Knowing exactly where support is eroding, and why, is the only way to know where the actual fight is happening and who still needs to be reached.

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