New Marquette Law School Poll national survey finds approval of the Supreme Court at new lows, with strong partisan differences over abortion and gun rights

MILWAUKEE – A new Marquette Law School Poll national survey finds approval of the U.S. Supreme Court has fallen to 38%, while 61% disapprove of how the Court is handling its job. In May, 44% approved and 55% disapproved, and in March, 54% approved and 45% disapproved.

By contrast, approval of the Court stood at 66% in September 2020, with 33% disapproval then. As recently as July 2021, the Court had a 60% approval rating. Table 1 shows the trend in approval since September 2020. (All results in the tables are stated as percentages; the precise wording of the questions can be found in the online link noted above.)

Table 1: Supreme Court job-approval trend, Sept. 2020-July 2022

Poll datesApproveDisapprove
9/8-15/206633
7/16-26/216039
9/7-16/214950
11/1-10/215446
1/10-21/225246
3/14-24/225445
5/9-19/224455
7/5-12/223861

The latest Marquette Law Poll Supreme Court survey was conducted July 5-12, 2022, shortly after the final decisions from the October 2021 Supreme Court term were released. The survey interviewed 1,003 adults nationwide and has a margin of error of +/-4 percentage points.

The sharp decline in approval in July follows the Court’s decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health, overruling the 1973 Roe v Wade decision, which announced a federal constitutional right to abortion in all 50 states. In March, prior to the leak of the draft opinion overturning Roe, 65% of those who favored striking down Roe approved of how the Court was handling its job, while 45% of those opposed to overturning Roe approved. Following the leaked opinion in May, approval rose sharply among those who favored overturning Roe, to 84%, and fell among those opposed, to 25%. In July, approval remained at 83% for those in favor of the Dobbs decision but fell even further among those opposed to striking down Roe, to 11%. Table 2 shows the full trend in approval of the Court’s job performance, by position on Roe.

Table 2: Approval of the Supreme Court’s job performance, by favor or oppose overturning Roe v. Wade

Position on RoePoll datesApproveDisapprove
Favor overturn Roe3/14-24/226534
Favor overturn Roe5/9-19/228416
Favor overturn Roe7/5-12/228317
Oppose overturn Roe3/14-24/224554
Oppose overturn Roe5/9-19/222574
Oppose overturn Roe7/5-12/221189

Approval of the Court is more sharply polarized along party lines than it was in March. In March, partisan differences were modest, with a majority of both Republicans (64%) and Democrats (52%) approving of the Court’s handling of its job. This changed after the leaked draft opinion in May, with approval among Republicans rising to 71% and approval among Democrats falling to 28%. This divide widened further after the Court ruling was handed down on June 24, with approval among Republicans remaining high at 67% and virtually collapsing among Democrats to 15%. Approval among independents also declined from March to May, but did not change further after the June decision. Table 3 shows approval by party identification in the March, May, and July surveys.

Table 3: Court approval, by party identification, March, May, and July 2022

Party IDPoll datesApproveDisapprove
Republican3/14-24/226436
Republican5/9-19/227129
Republican7/5-12/226732
Independent3/14-24/225148
Independent5/9-19/223861
Independent7/5-12/223960
Democrat3/14-24/225248
Democrat5/9-19/222870
Democrat7/5-12/221585

Self-described ideology is strongly associated with approval of the Court, which also increased in polarization from March to July, as shown in Table 4. Approval of the Court’s job performance increased among those who describe themselves as “very conservative” or “conservative,” while it decreased among those who consider themselves “moderate,” “liberal,” or “very liberal.” The difference in approval rate between the most conservative and most liberal respondents is now 75 percentage points, up from 36 percentage points in March.

Table 4: Court approval by ideology, March, May, and July 2022

IdeologyPoll datesApproveDisapprove
Very conservative3/14-24/226535
Very conservative5/9-19/227525
Very conservative7/5-12/227919
Somewhat conservative3/14-24/226831
Somewhat conservative5/9-19/227227
Somewhat conservative7/5-12/227128
Moderate3/14-24/225840
Moderate5/9-19/223663
Moderate7/5-12/222971
Somewhat liberal3/14-24/224060
Somewhat liberal5/9-19/222872
Somewhat liberal7/5-12/22990
Very liberal3/14-24/222971
Very liberal5/9-19/22988
Very liberal7/5-12/22496

Support for and opposition to overturning Roe

Opinion on overturning Roe v. Wade has only slightly changed in the wake of the Court’s decision in June. Among those with an opinion on the issue, 36% favor the overturning of Roe, while 64% oppose striking it down. That is a 5-percentage-point increase among those who favor overturning Roe and a 5-percentage-point decrease among those opposed to striking down Roe, compared to opinion in May, when 31% were in favor of such a ruling and 69% were opposed. Table 5 shows the trend on this question since September 2019.

Table 5: Favor or oppose overturning Roe v. Wade, trend among those with an opinion, 2019-2022

Poll datesFavor overturn RoeOppose overturn Roe
9/3-13/193268
9/8-15/203763
9/7-16/212872
11/1-10/213070
1/10-21/222872
3/14-24/223268
5/9-19/223169
7/5-12/223664

Substantial partisan divides on Roe have changed little from March through July. Table 6 shows views on overturning Roe by party. Opinion among independents fluctuated modestly, while totals for Republicans and Democrats hardly changed across the three surveys.

Table 6: Opinion on overturning Roe, by party identification, March, May and July 2022

Party IDPoll datesFavor overturn RoeOppose overturn Roe
Republican3/14-24/226832
Republican5/9-19/226931
Republican7/5-12/227129
Independent3/14-24/223169
Independent5/9-19/222476
Independent7/5-12/223664
Democrat3/14-24/22892
Democrat5/9-19/22595
Democrat7/5-12/22991

A large majority, 81%, said they had read or heard a lot about the decision to overturn Roe, while 15% said they had read a little and 3% said they had read nothing at all.

In May, following the leaked draft opinion, 40% said they had heard a lot about that, 36% had heard a little, and 24% said they had read or heard nothing at all.

More than three-quarters of each partisan group say they have read or heard a lot about the decision overturning Roe. This is considerably larger in each partisan group than those who heard a lot about the leaked draft opinion in May, when half or less of each partisan group had heard a lot about the draft opinion. The amount read or heard about the leaked draft and the final decision by party is shown in Table 7.

Table 7: How much read or heard about the leaked draft opinion, by party identification, May and July 2022

(a) May, heard about leaked draft opinion on Roe

Party IDA lotA littleNothing at all
Republican433917
Independent313732
Democrat513217


(b) July, heard about Court ruling overturning Roe

Party IDA lotA littleNothing at all
Republican81170
Independent76185
Democrat8992

Perceptions of Court ideology

Over the past three years, perceptions of the Court in ideological terms have shifted substantially in the conservative direction. In this most recent poll, less than half as many see the Court as “moderate” compared to perceptions in September 2019, and almost seven times as many say it is “very conservative” as was the case in September 2019. Specifically, Table 8 shows the trend in perceived ideology of the Court: Over this time, the percentage saying the Court is “moderate” has fallen from 50% in September 2019 to 21% in July 2022, while the percentage saying the Court is “very conservative” has increased from 5% to 34%. While these shifts continued in July, the trend was well established prior to the Court’s decisions this summer.

Table 8: Perceived ideology of the Supreme Court, Sept. 2019-July 2022

Poll datesVery conservativeSomewhat conservativeModerateSomewhat liberalVery liberal
9/3-13/195335093
9/8-15/205305492
7/16-26/2113374261
9/7-16/2116354072
11/1-10/2115353981
1/10-21/2217383582
3/14-24/22153736102
5/9-19/2223333482
7/5-12/2234332173

Second Amendment

The Court ruled in June, in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association Inc. v. Bruen, that the Second Amendment protects the right to possess a gun outside the home. A majority of respondents, 56%, favor this ruling, while 44% oppose this expansion of gun rights, among those with an opinion. Compared to the May survey, this was a 10-percentage-point decrease in those favoring the ruling and a 10-point increase in those opposed. The trend in opinion of this issue, which had been quite stable since September 2021, is shown in Table 9.

 

Table 9: Favor Second Amendment right to possess a gun outside the home, among those with an opinion, Sept. 2021-July 2022

Poll datesFavorOppose
9/7-16/216337
11/1-10/216535
1/10-21/226733
3/14-24/226337
5/9-19/226634
7/5-12/225644

Substantial majorities of both Republicans and independents favor this ruling, while a large majority of Democrats oppose it, as shown in Table 10. Democrats became substantially more opposed to this ruling in July, after the decision, while independent support remained a majority but declined by 10 percentage points. Republican support rose to a near-unanimous 95%.

Table 10: Favor ruling that there is a Second Amendment right to possess a gun outside the home by party identification, May-July 2022

Party IDPoll datesFavorOppose
Republican5/9-19/228911
Republican7/5-12/22955
Independent5/9-19/227129
Independent7/5-12/226139
Democrat5/9-19/223169
Democrat7/5-12/221882

In this July poll, awareness of the decision in Bruen was substantially lower than awareness of the Dobbs decision, with 47% saying they had read or heard a lot about the Second Amendment ruling, 36% saying they read or heard a little, and 16% saying they heard nothing at all.

Partisan differences in awareness of the decision were modest, as shown in Table 11, with Democrats 11 percentage points more likely than Republicans to have heard a lot and independents only slightly less likely to have heard a lot than Republicans.

Table 11: How much have you read or heard about the Second Amendment decision, by party identification, July 2022

Party IDA lotA littleNothing at all
Republican463717
Independent413920
Democrat573211

Support for possession of a gun outside the home by gun ownership is shown in Table 12, with a large majority of gun households in favor of expanded Second Amendment rights, and a small majority of those without a gun in the home opposed.

Table 12: Favor Second Amendment right to possess a gun outside the home, by gun ownership, May 2022

Gun ownershipFavorOppose
Gun household7228
Not gun household4654

Public funding for attendance at religious schools

In the latest of a series of recent cases in which the Court has expanded ways that public funding for religious schools could increase, the Court ruled in Carson v. Makin that Maine cannot exclude tuition support to students attending religious schools that is otherwise available to students attending non-religious private schools. Unlike the decisions on abortion and gun rights, a majority of respondents say they have heard nothing about this case (36%) or have heard of it but do not know enough to give an opinion (23%). Of those who do have an opinion, 59% favor the decision and 41% oppose it. When asked about this possible decision in September 2021, 69% favored a ruling in favor of providing tuition for attendance at religious schools in the circumstances described and 31% were opposed, among those with an opinion.

While the salience of this decision is much less than for others, increased partisan polarization is also apparent. Table 13 shows how the partisan divide has increased from September 2021 to July 2022.

Table 13: Favor or oppose public tuition support for religious schools, by party identification, among those with an opinion, Sept. 2021 & July 2022

Party IDPoll datesFavorOppose
Republican9/7-16/21919
Republican7/5-12/228713
Independent9/7-16/217030
Independent7/5-12/226436
Democrat9/7-16/214456
Democrat7/5-12/222872

In July, support for this ruling is highest among born-again Protestants, followed by Roman Catholics and mainline Protestants. A bare majority of those with other religious affiliations favor this ruling, while those without a religious attachment are the only group with a majority opposed to the decision, as shown in Table 14. Compared to September 2021, the percentage favoring this decision rose among born-again Protestants, while declining among other religious groups.

 

Table 14: Favor or oppose public tuition support for students attending religious schools, by religion, among those with an opinion, July 2022

ReligionPoll datesFavorOppose
Born-again Protestant9/7-16/218614
Born-again Protestant7/5-12/22928
Mainline Protestant9/7-16/217030
Mainline Protestant7/5-12/226139
Roman Catholic9/7-16/218416
Roman Catholic7/5-12/227921
No religion9/7-16/214753
No religion7/5-12/223268
Other religion9/7-16/216337
Other religion7/5-12/225149

Confidence in the Court and other institutions

Confidence in the Court has decreased since 2019, although the public continues to express more confidence in it than in Congress or the presidency. Table 15 shows the trend in confidence in the three branches of the federal government since September 2019. The percentage saying they have little or no confidence in the Court has more than doubled since 2019, while confidence in the other institutions (lower to begin with) has fluctuated but not changed so substantially.

Table 15: Confidence in branches of the federal government, 2019-2022

(a) Supreme Court

Poll datesGreat deal/quite a lotSomeVery little/none at allDK/Ref
9/3-13/193742201
9/8-15/203945160
7/5-12/222828440

(b) Congress

Poll datesGreat deal/quite a lotSomeVery little/none at allDK/Ref
9/3-13/191039510
9/8-15/201342441
7/5-12/221035560


(c) The Presidency

Poll datesGreat deal/quite a lotSomeVery little/none at allDK/Ref
9/3-13/192825470
9/8-15/203123450
7/5-12/222131480

As with approval of the Court’s job performance, confidence in the Court has become much more polarized by party. Confidence in the presidency has shifted by party sharply with partisan control of that office, while views of Congress have fluctuated but not trended as much. Table 16 shows the relationship of party and confidence for each institution.

Table 16: Confidence in branches of the federal government, by party identification, 2019-2022

(a) Supreme Court

Party IDPoll datesGreat deal/quite a lotSomeVery little/none at allDK/Ref
Republican9/3-13/195332142
Republican9/8-15/20504280
Republican7/5-12/225130190
Independent9/3-13/192847240
Independent9/8-15/203446190
Independent7/5-12/222829430
Democrat9/3-13/193444210
Democrat9/8-15/203645190
Democrat7/5-12/221024660

(b) Congress

Party IDPoll datesGreat deal/quite a lotSomeVery little/none at allDK/Ref
Republican9/3-13/19937540
Republican9/8-15/201740430
Republican7/5-12/221136520
Independent9/3-13/19734590
Independent9/8-15/20639532
Independent7/5-12/22729631
Democrat9/3-13/191348390
Democrat9/8-15/201646380
Democrat7/5-12/221141480

(c) The Presidency

Party IDPoll datesGreat deal/quite a lotSomeVery little/none at allDK/Ref
Republican9/3-13/196920120
Republican9/8-15/20702180
Republican7/5-12/221419670
Independent9/3-13/191933470
Independent9/8-15/202129500
Independent7/5-12/221629550
Democrat9/3-13/19719731
Democrat9/8-15/20920710
Democrat7/5-12/223244230

The percentage of those who say that the justices are making decisions based mainly on the law has declined from 64% in September 2019 to 48% in July 2022, while those saying that justices’ decisions are based mainly on politics has increased from 35% to 52% over the same time. The full trend is shown in Table 17.

Table 17: What most often motivates Supreme Court justices’ decisions: mainly the law or mainly politics? 2019-2022

Poll datesMainly politicsMainly the law
9/3-13/193564
9/8-15/203762
7/16-26/212971
9/7-16/213961
11/1-10/213070
1/10-21/224753
7/5-12/225248

While views of the basis of the justices’ decisions have turned toward politics, people view the decisions of “the Court” as an institution as even more politically motivated. When asked, “In general, do you think that the Supreme Court is mainly motivated by politics or mainly motivated by the law?”—rather than “In general, what most often motivates Supreme Court justices’ decisions?” (with the options being “Mainly politics” and “Mainly the law”)—a higher percentage, by some 10 percentage points, say the Court is motivated by politics. This is shown in Table 18 (as compared with Table 17).

Table 18: Do you think that the Supreme Court is mainly motivated by politics or mainly motivated by the law?, 2022

Poll datesMainly politicsMainly the lawWeb blank
1/10-21/2257430
7/5-12/2261390

In striking down Roe v. Wade, the Court overturned a longstanding precedent. The extent to which precedent should be followed has been the subject of questions during confirmation hearings for Court nominees for some time, including specifically with respect to Roe. For the public, however, following precedent has been less important than overturning a ruling the majority of the Court believes to have been wrongly decided. In the wake of the overturning of Roe, the public now gives more weight than previously to precedent, but a still solid two-to-one majority thinks the Court should be free to strike down precedents. Table 19 shows this trend.

Table 19: Should justices of the Supreme Court follow previous decisions whenever possible or should the Court overturn previous decisions if a majority of the Court believes the case was wrongly decided?, 2020-2022

Poll datesFollow previous decisionsOverturn if a majority think it was wrongly decided
9/8-15/201881
9/7-16/212674
7/5-12/223366

While approval of the Court’s job performance and confidence in the Court have declined, as set forth earlier in this release, there has not been any change in support for expanding the size of the Court over the past year, and only a small increase since 2019. Opinion is evenly divided on increasing the number of justices, as shown in Table 20.

Table 20: Support for increasing the number of justices, 2019-2022

Poll datesExpand CourtDo not expand
9/3-13/194256
9/8-15/204653
7/16-26/214851
9/7-16/214851
11/1-10/214852
7/5-12/224951

There has been a modest increase in support for the Court’s considering public opinion when making decisions: from a small majority in 2020 saying public opinion should be ignored to a similar small majority in 2022 saying the Court should consider public opinion, as shown in Table 21.

Table 21: Should Court consider public opinion when deciding cases, 2020-2022

Poll datesShould consider public opinionShould ignore public opinion
9/8-15/204455
9/7-16/214159
7/5-12/225446

Opinion of same-sex marriage and LGBTQ discrimination decisions

A large majority (66%) of respondents favor the 2015 Supreme Court decision that ruled the Constitution guarantees a right to same-sex marriage, while 34% oppose that ruling.

An even larger majority (84%) favor the 2020 Supreme Court ruling that federal civil rights law protects gay and transgender workers from workplace discrimination, while 16% oppose that decision. Table 22 shows these opinions by party identification.

Table 22: Favor same-sex marriage and LGBTQ anti-discrimination rulings, by party identification, July 2022

a) Same-sex marriage decision

Party IDFavorOppose
Republican4555
Independent6436
Democrat8416

(b) LGBTQ anti-discrimination decision

Party IDFavorOppose
Republican6832
Independent8515
Democrat937

About the Marquette Law School Poll

The survey was conducted July 5-12, 2022, interviewing 1,003 adults nationwide, with a margin of error of +/-4 percentage points. Interviews were conducted using the SSRS Opinion Panel, a national probability sample with interviews conducted online. The detailed methodology statement, survey instrument, topline results, and crosstabs for this release are available on the Marquette Law School Poll website. Some items from this survey are held for later release.

Wording of questions about recent Supreme Court decisions: These items do not attempt to exactly frame the particular issues in specific cases but rather address the topic in more general terms. (Prior to the decisions, these were asked as possible future decisions with descriptions identical to those here.)

Do you favor or oppose the following recent Supreme Court decisions, or haven’t you heard enough about this to have an opinion?

Opinion of same-sex marriage decision:

Opinion of decision that anti-discrimination laws protect LGBTQ people:

In 2020 the Supreme Court ruled that a federal civil rights law protects gay and transgender workers from workplace discrimination. How much do you favor or oppose this decision?