A majority of Americans acknowledge that transgender people face substantial prejudice in the U.S., according to the most recent NBC News online survey conducted by SurveyMonkey. Nearly half of Americans say transgender individuals face “a lot” of negative social judgment in their own communities, and another 37% say they face “some” stigma.
Americans overwhelmingly say that the very public transition of Caitlyn Jenner will help society become more accepting of transgender people. Two-thirds of Americans say Jenner’s transition will make people more accepting – 20% say Jenner’s high profile will help “a lot” and 46% say it will help “a little.”
Jenner, the Olympic champion whose transition was chronicled in the Vanity Fair issue set to hit newsstands on Tuesday, took the internet by storm last week. Caitlyn Jenner was the most searched item on Google, with more than 10 million searches. And her debut on Twitter garnered her more than 1 million followers in four hours, breaking the previous record for attaining Twitter followers held by Barack Obama. Jenner was interviewed by Diane Sawyer on ABC in April and will also star in an upcoming reality show on E! (NBC News and E! are owned by NBCUniversal).
Looking ahead 10 years, three quarters of Americans say that the country will become more accepting of transgender people. While 47% say the level of social acceptance will be “a little” more accepting, 29% of Americans think that society will become “a lot” more accepting. Eighteen percent say that there will be no difference in attitudes, and just 5% say Americans will be less accepting of transgender people a decade from now.









