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Americans identify as socially conservative at highest numbers in decade

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About one in three adults under 30 consider themselves conservative. An Increase from 24 percent just two years ago. Photo: Marlene Lepannen. Pexels.

Americans may be rebelling against an increasingly liberal culture. More adults identify as social conservatives than at any time in the past decade, a new Gallup poll has found.

Nearly four in 10 respondents said they are conservative or very conservative on social issues, an increase from the 33 percent who said so last year. The percentage who now say they are liberal or very liberal on these issues dropped from 33 percent last year to 29 percent.

Gallup had not found as many people identifying as social conservatives since 2012, which it said was a time when respondents consistently identified more as conservative than liberal on social issues.

Among the other findings:

READ: Americans say they’re fed up

The results come as Republican-led states have pushed forward various initiatives on social issues in the past year, including many restrictive abortion bans following the overturn of Roe v. Wade and bans on gender-affirming care for transgender youth. Gallup said in its analysis that Americans were about as likely to say they are conservative on social issues as that they are liberal in the past eight years. But conservatism has a clear advantage this year, largely because of the increase among Republicans.

“Greater social conservatism may be fostering an environment more favorable to passing conservative-leaning social legislation, especially in Republican-dominated states,” the survey report said.

–Alan Goforth | Metro Voice

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