The Margin: What percentage of Americans support Roe v. Wade? How Americans really feel about abortion, according to polls

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The United States Supreme Court may be looking to strike down Roe v. Wade, the landmark abortion ruling from 1973, according to a now-authenticated leaked draft majority opinion published on Politico.

“Roe was egregiously wrong from the start,” Justice Samuel Alito wrote in the majority opinion draft. “We hold that Roe and Casey must be overruled,” Alito went on to say, citing a 1992 case that confirmed the 1973 Roe decision.

Amid the possibility that Roe v. Wade could be overturned, it’s worth taking a look at how Americans feel about overturning the ruling and about abortion as a topic.

The polling data is pretty clear that a majority of Americans think that Roe v. Wade should not be overturned. According to a January poll from CNN, 69% of Americans want to keep Roe intact, while just 30% want the ruling completely overturned.

This position is not a recent change either, as support has actually remained fairly consistent for over 20 years. Since 1989, between 52% and 66% of U.S. adults have said they want Roe to remain, according to polling conducted and compiled by Gallup.

According to data from Pew, Gallup, Kaiser Family Foundation and YouGov compiled by FiveThirtyEight, roughly 10% to 15% of Americans think abortion should be illegal in all cases, about 25% to 30% want abortion to be legal in all cases, and 55% to 65% tell pollsters that they want abortion to be legal in some or most cases. 

When asked if abortions should be legal in the first trimester, 61% of Americans agree, a slight drop from the 69% of Americans who say they support Roe. A majority of Americans also say that abortions in the second and third trimesters should be illegal in almost all cases, according to AP-NORC data.

Only 1.3% of abortions are performed at 21 weeks of gestation or later, according to the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists.

A more comprehensive view of how Americans feel about abortion and when it should be allowed can been seen below.

Results based on interviews with 1,125 U.S. adults conducted June 10-14. The margin of error is 4.2 percentage points for the full sample.


AP-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research

Abortion is a complex issue that is often reduced to “pro-life” or “pro-choice,” but Americans’ feelings on the matter are more nuanced.

“What it speaks to is the fact that the debate is dominated by the extreme positions on both sides,” Barbara Carvalho, a pollster at Marist, said in 2019. “People do see the issue as very complicated, very complex. Their positions don’t fall along one side or the other.”

Some political analysts have argued that any attempt to overturn Roe by the conservative majority on the Supreme Court could result in a boost for Democratic turnout in November’s midterm elections, but voters in recent years have not identified abortion as a top issue. Among registered voters in the 2020 election, abortion ranked 12th highest on a list of “very important” to their vote issues, according to Pew Research, behind other issues like climate change, gun control and immigration.

See also: We don’t know who the Roe v. Wade leaker is. But the organized, focused and well-funded Republicans may have just won again

The idea of overturning Roe v. Wade has already drawn pushback from Democrats including President Biden who responded to the news by calling for voters to “elect pro-choice officials this November,” and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer who indicated he would hold a vote on legislation to codify the right to an abortion into federal law.

Republicans, including Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, criticized the leak of the documents more broadly instead of the contents of the documents, calling it a “toxic stunt.”

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