New York Daily News

Poll: Small rise in adults identifyin­g as LGBTQ

- BY MURI ASSUNÇÃO

A total of 7.2% of adults in the United States identified as LGBTQ in 2022 a Gallup poll released Wednesday shows.

While that’s just a small increase from 2021 numbers — 7.1% — the 2022 Gallup data reflects an overall upward trend. In 2012, when the analytics giant began measuring LGBTQ identifica­tion, only about 3.5% of adults self-identified as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgende­r, queer or something other than heterosexu­al and cisgender (meaning they identify with the sex they were assigned at birth).

Researcher­s credit the younger generation­s — especially those born between 1997 and 2004, or Generation Z — for the continuous increase.

Nearly 20% of Gen Z adults identified as LGBTQ. That rate is considerab­ly lower (11.2%) among millennial­s (adults born between 1981 and 1996). Only 3.3% of Generation X adults, those born between 1965 and 1980 identified as LGBTQ.

Data for the survey came from phone interviews with over 10,000 adults. Gallup researcher­s asked respondent­s if they identified as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgende­r, or another identity. Some of the volunteere­d responses included pansexual, asexual or queer. Respondent­s could also choose multiple identities.

As is “typically the case,” the largest share of LGBTQ adults identified as bisexual. About one in five LGBT adults identify as gay, about one in seven say they are lesbian, and slightly fewer than one in 10 identify as transgende­r.

The proportion of bisexual adults is also higher among younger generation­s.

About 66% of LGBTQ Gen Z adults and 62% of LGBTQ millennial­s identified as bisexual in 2022. Among older generation­s, less than half of LGBT adults say they are bisexual.

Even though LGBTQ identifica­tion remained somewhat stable in 2022 when compared to the previous year, it has become “much more common in the U.S. in the past decade,” researcher­s wrote, adding that the upwards trend is expected to continue.

“With many more younger than older adults seeing themselves as something other than heterosexu­al, the LGBT share of the entire U.S. adult population can be expected to grow in future years,” researcher­s wrote.

“However, this growth depends on younger people who enter adulthood in future years continuing to be much more likely to identify as LGBT than their parents, grandparen­ts and great-grandparen­ts,” they added.

 ?? ?? Balloons in the form of the word “Pride” are carried during the Pride Parade on Chicago’s North Side last June.
Balloons in the form of the word “Pride” are carried during the Pride Parade on Chicago’s North Side last June.

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