Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jun 30
Republican Support for Same-Sex Marriage Drops 18 Points as Conservatives Target Obergefell
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jun 30

Republican Support for Same-Sex Marriage Drops 18 Points as Conservatives Target Obergefell

2 articles · Updated · The New York Times · Jun 30

Summary

  • Republican backing for same-sex marriage has fallen 18 percentage points since 2022, weakening the sense that marriage equality is politically settled 11 years after Obergefell v. Hodges.
  • Conservative activists and lawmakers are using that shift to press a more aggressive campaign against the 2015 Supreme Court ruling that made same-sex marriage a nationwide right.
  • The opinion essay argues that marriage equality once gained support through a narrower case—that being gay is neither chosen nor changeable and deserves equal legal protection.
  • It says that message is now being diluted by the broader use of “queer” as an identity tied to resistance to social norms, a change the author sees as making same-sex marriage more vulnerable.

Insights

Is the shift from 'gay' to 'queer' weakening the legal foundation of marriage equality?
How secure are the 823,000 existing same-sex marriages amid growing legal challenges?