New Marquette Law School Poll national survey finds majority of public opposed to overturning Roe v. Wade, yet closely divided on 15-week abortion limit

Jan. 26, 2022


Please note: Complete Poll results and methodology information can be found online at law.marquette.edu/poll

MILWAUKEE —Forty-nine years after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in favor of a constitutional right to abortion, the public opposes overturning the 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling but is closely divided on limiting abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy.

A new Marquette Law School Poll national Supreme Court survey finds that, among those with an opinion on Roe, 28% say they are in favor of overturning the decision and 72% are opposed to overturning it. The case before the Court that includes argument for overturning Roe, Dobbs v Jackson Women’s Health Organization, concerns a Mississippi law that restricts abortion after 15 weeks of pregnancy. Asked about that specific restriction, among those with an opinion, 49% favor that limitation on abortion, while 51% oppose it.

The survey was conducted Jan. 10-21, 2022, interviewing 1000 adults nationwide, with a margin of error of +/-4 percentage points.

There has been little shift in opinion on overturning Roe since September, as shown in Table 1. Opinion on Dobbs, shown in Table 2, has remained closely divided, but has shifted slightly to being more opposed to the restrictions at issue in Dobbs since September. The percentages in the tables show results among those with an opinion of each case.

Table 1: Favor or oppose overturning Roe v. Wade, among those with an opinion, Jan. 2022

Poll dates

Favor

Oppose

9/7-16/21

28

72

11/1-10/21

30

70

1/10-21/22

28

72

 

Table 2: Favor or oppose upholding 15-week abortion ban in Dobbs, among those with an opinion, Jan. 2022

Poll dates

Favor

Oppose

9/7-16/21

54

46

11/1-10/21

53

47

1/10-21/22

49

51

As the abortion issues before the Court have received more attention since summer, the percentage of respondents with an opinion about Roe has increased. In September, 71% said they had an opinion on reversing Roe; the number rose to 77% in January. There was little change in the number holding an opinion on Dobbs, which was 73% in September and 74% in January.

A Texas law, Senate Bill 8 (SB-8), is favored by 28% and opposed by 72% of those with an opinion about the law. SB-8 bans abortions after about six weeks of pregnancy, once fetal cardiac activity can be detected, and authorizes individual citizens to sue those who aid others in getting an abortion. In this survey, 81% say they have an opinion about this law. In November, 30% of those with an opinion favored the law, while 70% opposed it. In November, 84% had an opinion on this issue.

Views of the abortion issue differ by partisanship, with Republicans the only partisan group in which a majority favors overruling Roe v. Wade, as shown in Table 3.

Table 3: Percent who favor or oppose overturning Roe, among those with an opinion, by party identification, Jan. 2022

Party ID

Favor

Oppose

Republican

55

45

Lean Republican

36

64

Independent

31

69

Lean Democrat

9

91

Democrat

13

87

Support for upholding the 15-week ban in Dobbs draws more support across all party groups, though with a sharp gradient from Republicans to Democrats, shown in Table 4.

Table 4: Percent who favor or oppose upholding 15-week abortion ban at issue in Dobbs, by party identification, Jan. 2022, among those with an opinion

Party ID

Favor

Oppose

Republican

81

19

Lean Republican

80

20

Independent

46

54

Lean Democrat

24

76

Democrat

26

74

Partisan support for the Texas SB-8 law falls between that for overturning Roe and that for upholding the restriction at issue in Dobbs, among those with an opinion of the law, as shown in Table 5.

Table 5: Percent who favor or oppose Texas SB-8 law, among those with an opinion, by party identification, Jan. 2022

Party ID

Favor

Oppose

Republican

61

39

Lean Republican

40

60

Independent

28

72

Lean Democrat

7

93

Democrat

11

89

Gun rights

On Nov. 3, the Court heard oral arguments in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association Inc. v. Bruen. This case considers whether a New York denial of an application for concealed-carry licenses for self-defense violates the Second Amendment.

This survey asked if the respondent would favor or oppose a decision “that the Second Amendment right to ‘keep and bear arms’ protects the right to carry a gun outside the home.” Among those with an opinion, 67% say they favor such a ruling, while 33% are opposed. In September, 63% of those with an opinion favored such a ruling and 37% were opposed. In this January survey, 75% had an opinion on this issue, whereas 70% had an opinion in September.

Views on the right to possess a gun vary with partisanship, with overwhelming support among Republicans and only minority support among Democrats, as shown in Table 6.

Table 6: Percent who favor or oppose right to carry a gun, by party identification, among those with an opinion, Jan. 2022

Party ID

Favor

Oppose

Republican

94

6

Lean Republican

94

6

Independent

70

30

Lean Democrat

47

53

Democrat

36

64

Those with a gun in the household are much more supportive of a right to carry a gun outside the home, as shown in Table 7. Those without a gun in the household are about evenly split, while a large majority of gun householders support a right to carry. Gun owners are also more likely to have an opinion on the issue, 79%, than are those without guns in their home, 72%.

Table 7: Percent who favor or oppose right to carry a gun, by whether there is a gun in the household, among those with an opinion, Jan. 2022

Household status

Favor

Oppose

Gun household

84

16

Not gun household

54

46

Views of vaccine mandates

On Jan. 13, the Court stopped the federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) from enforcing a rule that would have mandated companies of more than 100 employees to require employees to either be vaccinated or be regularly tested for COVID19. The Court held the rule to be likely unlawful and stayed its enforcement pending further consideration of challenges to the mandate in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit. At the same time, the Court ruled that the federal government could require vaccination of health care workers at facilities that receive Medicare or Medicaid funding.

Asked about these policies, 54% favor the OSHA requirement, with 45% opposed, while 61% favor requiring vaccinations for health care workers and 38% are opposed.

Approval of the Supreme Court

Approval of the U.S. Supreme Court remains evenly divided, with 52% approving and 46% disapproving. Approval declined from 60% in July to 49% in September and has changed little since then. The trend in approval of the Court since 2020 is shown in Table 8.

Table 8: Approval of the Supreme Court, Sept. 2020-Jan. 2022

Poll dates

Approve

Disapprove

9/8-15/20

66

33

7/16-26/21

60

39

9/7-16/21

49

50

11/1-10/21

54

46

1/10-21/22

52

46

Approval has fluctuated among Democrats after falling sharply in September, while there was little recent change among independents and Republicans. All partisan groups have lower approval now than in September 2020. Table 9 shows approval by party over five Marquette Law School Poll surveys since September 2020.

Table 9: Approval of the Supreme Court by party, Sept. 2020-Jan. 2022

Party ID

Poll dates

Approve

Disapprove

Republican

9/8-15/20

80

19

Republican

7/16-26/21

57

42

Republican

9/7-16/21

61

38

Republican

11/1-10/21

61

39

Republican

1/10-21/22

60

37

Independent

9/8-15/20

64

34

Independent

7/16-26/21

61

37

Independent

9/7-16/21

51

48

Independent

11/1-10/21

53

47

Independent

1/10-21/22

52

46

Democrat

9/8-15/20

57

43

Democrat

7/16-26/21

59

40

Democrat

9/7-16/21

37

62

Democrat

11/1-10/21

49

50

Democrat

1/10-21/22

45

54

Perceptions of the basis of decisions

Views of the basis of decisions differ if the respondents are asked about what “motivates Supreme Court justices’ decisions” or if, instead, they are asked a question worded with a more institutional focus about whether “the Supreme Court is mainly motivated” by politics or by the law. In this survey, we asked a randomly selected half of the respondents one of this pair of questions at the beginning of the survey, before any other questions except how much attention the respondent pays to politics. This minimizes the extent to which the respondent has been primed to think about the Court. So half of this beginning-of-survey half got one question, and the other half of this early-survey half got the other question.

  • When asked about the justices’ motivation, 42% of this beginning-of-survey group say the justices are mainly motivated by politics and 58% say mostly by the law.
  • In contrast, when asked about the Court, 53% of this beginning-of-survey group say the Supreme Court is mainly motivated by politics and 47% say it is mainly motivated by the law.

Then, the other half (again, randomly selected) of the survey respondents were asked one (or the other) of these two questions much later in the survey, after questions about favorability of the justices, ideological placement of the Court, and items about specific cases concerning abortion and gun rights among others. When asked later in the survey, the perception of the motivations for decisions as being politics increases for the wording of both questions—the one speaking of the “justices” and the one focused on the “Court” as a single body.

  • When asked late in the survey, 55% say the justices are mainly motivated by politics and 45% say mostly by the law.
  • When asked late in the survey about the motivation of the Court as a whole, 60% say the Court is mainly motivated by politics and 40% say mostly by the law.

The implication of this finding is that views of the Court as a single institution provoke the perception of a more political body—and that perception is increased after respondents are required by many questions to think about the Court. In contrast, when the focus is on the justices, respondents are more likely to believe “the law” is the motivation of the justices, although this percentage declines (to a minority) after a numerous questions have required the respondent to think more about justices and cases before the Court, whereupon there is approximately an even split in impressions of motivations for decisions.

This reflects some difference in how citizens think about the motivations of individual justices and how they think of the Court as a whole. It also demonstrates that when people are prompted to think about the controversial cases before the Court, the percentage who see political motivations for both the justices and the institution increases.

Table 10 summarizes the results concerning the basis of decision.

Table 10: Basis of decision, by question focus and placement in survey, Jan. 2022

Placement

Question focus

Mainly politics

Mainly the law

Beginning of survey

Justices

42

58

Beginning of survey

The Court

53

47

Late in survey

Justices

55

45

Late in survey

The Court

60

40

The structure of opinion about the justices

The public is not familiar with most justices. Only 21% are able to express an opinion of Justice Stephen Breyer. The highest percentage, 55%, give an opinion about Justice Clarence Thomas, while 38% offer an opinion of Chief Justice John Roberts.

The three most recent appointees to the Court, Justices Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, and Amy Barrett, have the lowest net favorable ratings, reflecting contentious confirmations and the polarized environment of contemporary Court appointments. Recognition and opinion of the justices are shown in Table 11.

Table 11: Recognition and favorability ratings of justices, Jan. 2022

Justice

Able to rate

Net favorability

Favorable

Unfavorable

Samuel Alito

26

6

16

10

Amy Barrett

46

-2

22

24

Stephen Breyer

21

7

14

7

Neil Gorsuch

29

1

15

14

Elena Kagan

28

8

18

10

Brett Kavanaugh

53

-11

21

32

John Roberts

38

12

25

13

Sonia Sotomayor

50

20

35

15

Clarence Thomas

55

5

30

25

The public structures its views of the justices in ways that are consistent with the respondent’s partisan and ideological views, the party of the appointing president, and the common ideological characterization of the justices.

With the sole exception of Chief Justice Roberts, net favorability aligns with the partisanship of the respondent and the party of the president who appointed the justice, as shown in Table 12. This pattern holds for the less well-known justices (Breyer, Alito, Kagan and Gorsuch) and for the more widely known justices (Sotomayor, Barrett, Thomas, and Kavanaugh). Only Roberts is viewed more favorably than unfavorably by each partisan group.

Table 12: Recognition and favorability ratings of justices, by party identification of the respondent, Jan. 2022

Justice

Party ID

Able to rate

Net favorability

Favorable

Unfavorable

Samuel Alito

Republican

28

20

24

4

Samuel Alito

Independent

21

7

14

7

Samuel Alito

Democrat

31

-11

10

21

Amy Barrett

Republican

56

42

49

7

Amy Barrett

Independent

39

-3

18

21

Amy Barrett

Democrat

48

-38

5

43

Stephen Breyer

Republican

20

-4

8

12

Stephen Breyer

Independent

16

6

11

5

Stephen Breyer

Democrat

27

19

23

4

Neil Gorsuch

Republican

34

28

31

3

Neil Gorsuch

Independent

23

-1

11

12

Neil Gorsuch

Democrat

35

-19

8

27

Elena Kagan

Republican

27

-11

8

19

Elena Kagan

Independent

22

8

15

7

Elena Kagan

Democrat

37

27

32

5

Brett Kavanaugh

Republican

59

43

51

8

Brett Kavanaugh

Independent

42

-12

15

27

Brett Kavanaugh

Democrat

62

-52

5

57

John Roberts

Republican

42

20

31

11

John Roberts

Independent

33

9

21

12

John Roberts

Democrat

40

10

25

15

Sonia Sotomayor

Republican

49

-25

12

37

Sonia Sotomayor

Independent

42

18

30

12

Sonia Sotomayor

Democrat

61

57

59

2

Clarence Thomas

Republican

61

43

52

9

Clarence Thomas

Independent

48

8

28

20

Clarence Thomas

Democrat

59

-29

15

44

Views of the justices also align with the respondent’s ideological self-placement, with conservative respondents consistently more favorable to justices usually considered conservative, while liberal respondents are more favorable to those considered liberal justices. These results are shown in Table 13. Roberts is again the exception, viewed rather favorably by the middle categories of ideology but less so among both very conservative and very liberal respondents.

Table 13: Recognition and favorability ratings of justices, by respondent ideological self-placement, Jan. 2022

Justice

Ideology

Able to rate

Net favorability

Favorable

Unfavorable

Samuel Alito

Very conservative

35

21

28

7

Samuel Alito

Somewhat conservative

27

23

25

2

Samuel Alito

Moderate

20

6

13

7

Samuel Alito

Somewhat liberal

30

-16

7

23

Samuel Alito

Very liberal

35

-7

14

21

Amy Barrett

Very conservative

60

54

57

3

Amy Barrett

Somewhat conservative

56

38

47

9

Amy Barrett

Moderate

33

-5

14

19

Amy Barrett

Somewhat liberal

55

-43

6

49

Amy Barrett

Very liberal

58

-48

5

53

Stephen Breyer

Very conservative

24

-12

6

18

Stephen Breyer

Somewhat conservative

20

2

11

9

Stephen Breyer

Moderate

17

7

12

5

Stephen Breyer

Somewhat liberal

27

19

23

4

Stephen Breyer

Very Liberal

24

18

21

3

Neil Gorsuch

Very conservative

40

38

39

1

Neil Gorsuch

Somewhat conservative

28

20

24

4

Neil Gorsuch

Moderate

22

0

11

11

Neil Gorsuch

Somewhat liberal

36

-18

9

27

Neil Gorsuch

Very liberal

41

-29

6

35

Elena Kagan

Very conservative

31

-27

2

29

Elena Kagan

Somewhat conservative

28

-6

11

17

Elena Kagan

Moderate

23

9

16

7

Elena Kagan

Somewhat liberal

34

30

32

2

Elena Kagan

Very liberal

35

33

34

1

Brett Kavanaugh

Very conservative

64

62

63

1

Brett Kavanaugh

Somewhat conservative

55

35

45

10

Brett Kavanaugh

Moderate

41

-17

12

29

Brett Kavanaugh

Somewhat liberal

66

-54

6

60

Brett Kavanaugh

Very liberal

65

-59

3

62

John Roberts

Very conservative

54

6

30

24

John Roberts

Somewhat conservative

40

18

29

11

John Roberts

Moderate

30

14

22

8

John Roberts

Somewhat liberal

39

15

27

12

John Roberts

Very liberal

40

0

20

20

Sonia Sotomayor

Very conservative

54

-48

3

51

Sonia Sotomayor

Somewhat conservative

49

-23

13

36

Sonia Sotomayor

Moderate

41

29

35

6

Sonia Sotomayor

Somewhat liberal

62

54

58

4

Sonia Sotomayor

Very liberal

59

57

58

1

Clarence Thomas

Very conservative

64

50

57

7

Clarence Thomas

Somewhat conservative

63

43

53

10

Clarence Thomas

Moderate

48

4

26

22

Clarence Thomas

Somewhat liberal

60

-28

16

44

Clarence Thomas

Very liberal

51

-39

6

45

About the Marquette Law School Poll

The survey was conducted Jan. 10-21, 2022, interviewing 1000 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 at https://law.marquette.edu/poll/category/results-and-data/. Some items from this survey are held for later release.

Wording of questions about possible future 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.

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

  • Overturn Roe versus Wade, thus strike down the 1973 decision that made abortion legal in all 50 states.
  • Rule that the 2nd Amendment right to “keep and bear arms” protects the right to carry a gun outside the home.

Rule to uphold a state law that (except in cases of medical emergencies or fetal abnormalities) bans abortions after the 15th week of pregnancy.


About Kevin Conway

Kevin Conway

Kevin is the associate director for university communication in the Office of University Relations. Contact Kevin at (414) 288-4745 or kevin.m.conway@marquette.edu