Almost six in 10 Americans say they favor allowing gay and lesbian couples to enter into same-sex marriages, the highest level of support ever recorded in a NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll.
In the new survey released Monday, 59% of Americans said that they favor same-sex marriages while just 33% said they oppose them.
View the full poll results here
The numbers have shifted dramatically in the past decade. In 2004, only 30% of Americans said they supported same-sex marriage, while 62% disagreed. Half of those polled at the time said they strongly opposed allowing gays and lesbians to marry.
Democratic pollster Fred Yang noted how quickly public opinion has shifted on the issue, even compared to interracial marriage, which is now almost universally accepted.
“It took about 25 years for interracial marriage to get from 30% support to 60%,” he said. “It took same-sex marriage 10 years.”
The share of the public backing same-sex marriage has even jumped from just two years ago, when 53% of Americans backed it and 42% did not.









