For instance, in 2004, just months after Massachusetts became the first state to allow gay marriage, a joint survey by the Pew Research Center’s Forum on Religion & Public Life and the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press found that about twice as many Americans opposed legalizing same-sex marriage (60%) as supported it (29%). Since 1996, when the Pew Research Center began polling on the issue, opponents of legalizing same-sex marriage have consistently outnumbered supporters, although by varying margins at different points in time. For more recent public opinion data on same-sex marriage, strategies to legalize it, civil unions and the morality of homosexuality, see Majority Continues To Support Civil Unions Most Still Oppose Same-Sex Marriage (October 2009).
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