New Marquette Law School national survey finds U.S. Supreme Court approval remains below 50% following slight decline; public estimation of the justices’ honesty and ethical standards has increased slightly since May

Approval has been below 50% since May 2022, fluctuating in low 40s after low point in July 2022

Oct. 4, 2023


Other headlines:

  • Of 5 major decisions in recent years, majority of public favors 4; the exception is striking down Roe v. Wade
  • Party and ideology are strongly related to approval of the Court and to public opinion of decisions in individual cases
  • Less than a third of the public has heard a lot about Justice Thomas’s financial disclosures
  • More in public have high confidence in juries and state supreme courts than in U.S. Supreme Court, the presidency, or Congress

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

MILWAUKEE – As the U.S. Supreme Court begins its October 2023 term, a new Marquette Law School Poll national survey finds that 43% of adults approve of the job the Court is doing, while 57% disapprove. In the previous survey in July, 45% approved and 55% disapproved. Approval of the Court has remained below 50% since May 2022, when it stood at 44%. While approval is up from the low point of 38% in July 2022, it has fluctuated in the 40s percent range since then.

The trend in approval since 2020 is shown in Figure 1 and Table 1. (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: Approval of Supreme Court’s job performance

Among adults

Poll dates

Approval

Approve

Disapprove

9/18-25/23

43

57

7/7-12/23

45

55

5/8-18/23

41

59

3/13-22/23

44

56

1/9-20/23

47

53

11/15-22/22

44

56

9/7-14/22

40

60

7/5-12/22

38

61

5/9-19/22

44

55

3/14-24/22

54

45

1/10-21/22

52

46

11/1-10/21

54

46

9/7-16/21

49

50

7/16-26/21

60

39

9/8-15/20

66

33

Marquette Law School Poll, national surveys

Question: Overall, how much do you approve or disapprove of the way the U.S. Supreme Court is handling its job?

The latest Marquette Law School Poll’s national Supreme Court survey was conducted Sept. 18-25, 2023. The survey interviewed 1,007 adults nationwide and has a margin of error of +/-4.1 percentage points.

Partisan and ideological views of the Court and recent decisions

Approval among Republicans declined by 3 percentage points, to 66% in September, down from 69% in July. Approval among independents declined 7 percentage points, while among Democrats it rose 1 percentage point from July to September. Approval of the Court by party identification is shown in Table 2 for July and September. (Throughout this report, party identification includes independents who say they are closer to a party, while independents are those who say they are not closer to either party.)

Table 2: Approval of the Supreme Court’s job performance, with party identification, July and September 2023

Among adults

Party ID

Approval

Approve

Disapprove

Sept. 2023

Total

43

57

Republican

66

34

Independent

33

67

Democrat

24

76

July 2023

Total

45

55

Republican

69

31

Independent

40

59

Democrat

23

77

Marquette Law School Poll, national surveys, July 7-12, 2023 & Sept. 18-25, 2023

Question: Overall, how much do you approve or disapprove of the way the U.S. Supreme Court is handling its job?

Political ideology also structures opinion of the Court. Table 3 shows approval by ideology in July and September.

Table 3: Approval of the Supreme Court’s job performance, by political ideology, July and September 2023

Among adults

Ideology

Approval

Approve

Disapprove

Sept. 2023

Total

43

57

Very conservative

73

27

Somewhat conservative

69

31

Moderate

37

63

Somewhat liberal

22

78

Very liberal

6

94

July 2023

Total

45

55

Very conservative

82

18

Somewhat conservative

69

31

Moderate

39

61

Somewhat liberal

17

83

Very liberal

9

91

Marquette Law School Poll, national surveys, July 7-12, 2023 & Sept. 18-25, 2023

Question: Overall, how much do you approve or disapprove of the way the U.S. Supreme Court is handling its job?

Question: Generally speaking, how would you describe your political views?

Ideological views also structure reaction to individual decisions of the Court. Some decisions are more popular with all respondents, and some less popular, but reaction follows ideological lines for each of five major decisions of recent years.

Table 4 shows overall reaction to each decision. Four of the five decisions have a majority of the public in favor, while the decision overturning Roe v. Wade has a majority opposed.

Table 4: Favor or oppose recent major Court decisions

Among adults

Decision

Favor or oppose

Favor

Oppose

Same-sex marriage

69

31

LGBT anti-discrimination protection

85

15

Overturn Roe v. Wade

36

64

Guns outside home

64

36

Ban use of race in admissions

77

23

Marquette Law School Poll, national survey, Sept. 18-25, 2023

Question: In 2015, the Supreme Court ruled that the Constitution guarantees a right to same-sex marriage. How much do you favor or oppose this decision?

Question: 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?

Question: In 2022, the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, thus striking down the 1973 decision that made abortion legal in all 50 states. How much do you favor or oppose this decision?

Question: In 2022, the Supreme Court ruled that, subject to some restrictions, the Second Amendment protects an individual’s right to carry a handgun for self-defense outside the home. How much do you favor or oppose this decision?

Question: In 2023, the Supreme Court ruled that colleges cannot use race as a factor in deciding which applicants to admit. How much do you favor or oppose this decision?

Table 5 shows the percentage favoring each of those decisions by respondent ideology. Liberals are more in favor of two decisions that are conventionally viewed as liberal—same-sex marriage and anti-discrimination protection for LGBT workers—and conservatives are less in favor. Conservatives are more in favor, and liberals less so, for decisions conventionally viewed as conservative—abortion, guns outside the home, and banning the use of race in college admissions.

Table 5: Favor recent Court decisions, by ideology

Adults

Ideology

Percentage favoring decision

Same-sex marriage

LGBT anti-discrimination protection

Overturn Roe v. Wade

Guns outside home

Ban use of race in admissions

Very conservative

34

72

75

84

93

Somewhat conservative

54

77

63

83

96

Moderate

76

88

26

71

76

Somewhat liberal

87

92

10

34

63

Very liberal

96

95

6

29

47

Marquette Law School Poll, national survey, Sept. 18-25, 2023

Question: Generally speaking, how would you describe your political views?

Questions about cases: See under Table 4 for phrasings.

 

As with ideology, partisanship structures reaction to decisions, as shown in Table 6.

Table 6: Favor recent Court decisions, by party identification

Adults

Party ID

Percentage favoring decision

Same-sex marriage

LGBT anti-discrimination protection

Overturn Roe v. Wade

Guns outside home

Ban use of race in admissions

Republican

50

77

60

88

94

Independent

70

84

39

73

84

Democrat

87

92

13

40

60

Marquette Law School Poll, national survey, Sept. 18-25, 2023

Question: Generally speaking, do you usually think of yourself as a Republican, a Democrat, or an Independent?

Question for independents: Do you think of yourself as closer to the Republican Party or to the Democratic Party? (Only those answering that they are not closer to either party form “independent” group in table, as explained above.)

Questions about cases: See under Table 4 for phrasings.

Attention to news about the Court

In September, prior to the start of the Court’s October term, few people (17%) said they had heard or read “a lot” about the court in the previous month, while 61% said they had heard “a little” news and 22% had heard “nothing at all.”

Twenty-nine percent said they had heard a lot about news concerning Justice Clarence Thomas’s submission of revised financial disclosure reports on Aug. 31, though more (39%) said they had heard nothing at all about this and 32% had heard a little. After news stories about Thomas’s financial reports first surfaced, the May Marquette poll found that 33% had heard a lot, 32% had heard a little, and 35% had heard nothing at all.

Recent news concerning the justices’ financial disclosures and related matters have raised attention to the ethical standards of the Court. Table 7 shows the trend since May in perception of the justices’ ethical standards. Public estimation on the justices’ honesty and ethical standards has increased slightly in this time.

Table 7: Honesty and ethical standards of U.S. Supreme Court justices

Among adults

Poll dates

Perceived honesty and ethical standards

Very high/high

Average

Low/Very low

9/18-25/23

30

41

29

7/7-12/23

32

33

35

5/8-18/23

26

39

35

Marquette Law School Poll, national surveys

Question: U.S. Supreme Court justices: Please tell me how you would rate the honesty and ethical standards of people in these different fields?

Attention to Supreme Court decisions naturally surges after decisions are handed down and then declines as the decisions themselves recede into the past. Table 8 shows how attention to news concerning the case (decided in June) to ban the use of race in college admissions was quite low in May prior to the decision, rose sharply in July, and declined in September.

Table 8: Attention to news about race in admissions decision

Among adults

Poll dates

Attention to news about the case

A lot

A little

Nothing at all

9/18-25/23

31

45

23

7/7-12/23

51

31

18

5/8-18/23

16

44

40

Marquette Law School Poll, national surveys

Question: Here are some recent topics in the news. How much have you heard or read about each of these? A Supreme Court case concerning the use of race in college admissions.

Awareness of the makeup of the Court, in terms of which party’s presidents have appointed a majority of justices, declined slightly in September, with 32% saying Republican presidents had definitely appointed a majority of justices, 42% saying Republican presidents had probably done so, and 26% saying a majority had definitely or probably been appointed by Democrats. The percentage correctly saying Republicans appointed a majority increased after 2020 when the appointment of Justice Amy Coney Barrett created the sixth member of the Court appointed by Republican presidents. Since then, awareness of the majority has fluctuated modestly, as shown in Table 9.

Table 9: Belief that majority of Court appointed by which party's presidents

Among adults

Poll dates

Majority appointed by

Definitely/Probably Dem majority

Probably Rep majority

Definitely Rep majority

9/18-25/23

26

42

32

7/7-12/23

22

42

36

5/8-18/23

29

41

30

3/13-22/23

27

41

31

1/9-20/23

23

41

36

11/15-22/22

24

40

35

9/7-14/22

22

40

37

7/5-12/22

20

40

40

5/9-19/22

31

39

31

3/14-24/22

28

47

24

1/10-21/22

23

44

33

11/1-10/21

28

44

28

9/7-16/21

25

46

29

7/16-26/21

24

45

30

9/8-15/20

28

51

21

9/3-13/19

27

53

19

Marquette Law School Poll, national surveys

Question: What is your guess as to whether a majority of the current U.S. Supreme Court justices were appointed by Democratic or Republican presidents?

Confidence in institutions

Confidence in several institutions is summarized in Table 10. Juries in criminal cases have the highest confidence among the six institutions and the lowest percentage saying little or no confidence, followed by state supreme courts. The U.S. Justice Department has the same percentage with high confidence as the state supreme courts, but a higher percentage with little or no confidence. More respondents express little confidence than express high confidence in the U.S. Supreme Court, Congress, or the presidency, though by different margins in each instance.

Table 10: Confidence in institutions

Among adults

Institution

Confidence

Great deal/a lot

Some

Little/None

Juries that decide criminal cases

40

41

19

Your state supreme court

30

45

25

The U.S. Department of Justice

30

35

35

U.S. Supreme Court

28

37

35

The presidency

24

33

43

Congress

12

38

49

Marquette Law School Poll, national survey, Sept. 18-25, 2023

Question: Here is a list of institutions in American society. How much confidence do you have in each one?

Confidence in juries is less divided by partisanship than is confidence in other institutions, as shown in Table 11. With no partisan group holding strongly negative views of juries, the overall confidence is higher. A higher percentage of Democrats express high confidence in juries, but the percentages with low confidence are similar across the partisan groups. This question was first asked in the current survey, so no trend data are available.

Table 11: Confidence in juries in criminal cases, with party identification, September 2023

Among adults

Party ID

Confidence

Great deal/a lot

Some

Little/None

Total

40

41

19

Republican

37

44

19

Independent

30

47

23

Democrat

46

36

18

Marquette Law School Poll, national surveys, July 7-12, 2023 & Sept. 18-25, 2023

Question: Here is a list of institutions in American society. How much confidence do you have in each one? Juries that decide guilt or innocence in criminal cases

The Department of Justice has become the subject of partisan debate over its handling of a number of prosecutions and investigations in recent years. Overall, 30% of the public say they have a great deal or a lot of confidence in the DOJ, while 35% say they have some confidence. A substantial 35% say they have little or no confidence. Those with high confidence increased from 25% in July, while those with little or no confidence declined from 41%.

Partisans are substantially divided concerning the Department of Justice. These differences are shown in Table 12. High confidence increased, at least slightly, in each partisan group in September. The percentage with little or no confidence declined among Republicans and independents, but rose slightly among Democrats.

Table 12: Confidence in the Department of Justice, with party identification, July and September 2023

Among adults

Party ID

Confidence

Great deal/a lot

Some

Little/None

Sept. 2023

Total

30

35

35

Republican

17

33

51

Independent

19

52

29

Democrat

45

32

23

July 2023

Total

25

34

41

Republican

13

28

58

Independent

18

33

49

Democrat

40

41

20

Marquette Law School Poll, national surveys, July 7-12, 2023 & Sept. 18-25, 2023

Question: The U.S. Department of Justice: Here is a list of institutions in American society. How much confidence do you have in each one?

Confidence in the Court as an institution declined 3 percentage points in September, with 28% saying they have a great deal or a lot of confidence in the Court, down from 31% in July. However, there was an increase in those saying they had “some” confidence in the Court, from 32% in July to 37% in September, and a decrease in those with little or no confidence, from 37% in July to 35% in September.

The full trend is shown in Table 13.

Table 13: Confidence in the U.S. Supreme Court

Among adults

Poll dates

Confidence

Great deal/a lot

Some

Little/None

9/18-25/23

28

37

35

7/7-12/23

31

32

37

5/8-18/23

25

36

39

3/13-22/23

28

40

32

1/9-20/23

31

38

31

11/15-22/22

30

36

34

9/7-14/22

30

34

36

7/5-12/22

28

28

44

9/8-15/20

39

45

16

9/3-13/19

37

42

20

Marquette Law School Poll, national surveys

Question: The U.S. Supreme Court: Here is a list of institutions in American society. How much confidence do you have in each one?

Confidence in the Supreme Court remains higher than confidence in Congress or the presidency. Confidence in Congress declined from July to September.

In September, 12% said they had a great deal or a lot of confidence in Congress, down from 14% in July, while those saying they had little or no confidence in Congress rose to 49% from 43%. The poll was completed before Congress took up, and eventually passed, a continuing resolution to fund the government through mid-November, thus avoiding a federal government shutdown.

There was also a decline in confidence in the presidency, with 24% having a great deal or a lot of confidence in September, compared to 28% in July. Those with little or no confidence increased to 43% from 40%.

These trends for Congress and the presidency are shown in Table 14 and Table 15.

Table 14: Confidence in the Congress

Among adults

Poll dates

Confidence

Great deal/a lot

Some

Little/None

9/18-25/23

12

38

49

7/7-12/23

14

44

43

5/8-18/23

11

41

49

3/13-22/23

15

43

42

1/9-20/23

13

43

44

11/15-22/22

17

43

40

9/7-14/22

16

37

47

7/5-12/22

10

35

56

9/8-15/20

13

42

44

9/3-13/19

10

39

51

Marquette Law School Poll, national surveys

Question: Congress: Here is a list of institutions in American society. How much confidence do you have in each one?

Table 15: Confidence in the presidency

Among adults

Poll dates

Confidence

Great deal/a lot

Some

Little/None

9/18-25/23

24

33

43

7/7-12/23

28

32

40

5/8-18/23

25

30

45

3/13-22/23

26

34

40

1/9-20/23

26

30

43

11/15-22/22

30

33

37

9/7-14/22

33

29

38

7/5-12/22

21

31

48

9/8-15/20

31

23

45

9/3-13/19

28

25

47

Marquette Law School Poll, national surveys

Question: The presidency: Here is a list of institutions in American society. How much confidence do you have in each one?

Perceived ideology of the Supreme Court

Public perception of the political ideology of the U.S. Supreme Court has shifted in a conservative direction since 2019, as shown in Table 16. In September 2019, 38% of the public saw the Court as very or somewhat conservative. In the current poll, 57% see the Court that way. Over this same period, the percentage saying the Court is moderate declined from 50% to 32%. Few people see the Court as liberal or very liberal: just 10% in both the July and September polls.

The September poll shows a decline in the percentage, 20%, saying the Court is “very conservative,” down from 27% in July. This is the lowest percentage with this view of the Court since March 2022.

Table 16: Perceived ideology of the U.S. Supreme Court

Among adults

Poll dates

Perceived ideology

Very conservative

Somewhat conservative

Moderate

Somewhat liberal

Very liberal

9/18-25/23

20

37

32

7

3

7/7-12/23

27

35

28

7

3

5/8-18/23

24

33

30

10

3

3/13-22/23

23

35

34

6

2

1/9-20/23

22

37

31

8

2

11/15-22/22

25

36

32

6

2

9/7-14/22

29

35

27

5

3

7/5-12/22

34

33

21

7

3

5/9-19/22

23

33

34

8

2

3/14-24/22

15

37

36

10

2

1/10-21/22

17

38

35

8

2

11/1-10/21

15

35

39

8

1

9/7-16/21

16

35

40

7

2

7/16-26/21

13

37

42

6

1

9/8-15/20

5

30

54

9

2

9/3-13/19

5

33

50

9

3

Marquette Law School Poll, national surveys

Question: The U.S. Supreme Court: In general, would you describe each of the following as…?

Since the Marquette Law Poll’s first national Supreme Court survey in 2019, there has been an increase in the percentage of the public who think the justices’ decisions are motivated by politics. It is 52% in the current poll, while it was 35% in the first survey in September 2019. Following the smallest percentage, 29% in July 2021, and a similarly low percentage (30%) in November 2021, there was a sharp increase beginning with the January 2022 poll, when 47% thought that justices’ decisions are motivated by politics. The full trend is shown in Table 17.

Table 17: Are justices' decisions motivated mainly by the law or mainly by politics?

Among adults

Poll dates

Perceived motivation

Mainly politics

Mainly the law

9/18-25/23

52

48

7/7-12/23

58

42

1/9-20/23

49

51

7/5-12/22

52

48

1/10-21/22

47

53

11/1-10/21

30

70

9/7-16/21

39

61

7/16-26/21

29

71

9/8-15/20

37

62

9/3-13/19

35

64

Marquette Law School Poll, national surveys

Question: In general, what most often motivates Supreme Court justices’ decisions?

Support for increasing the size of the Supreme Court has increased gradually since 2019, with 54% favoring expanding the Court and 46% opposed in the current survey. The full trend is shown in Table 18.

Table 18: Favor or oppose expanding the U.S. Supreme Court

Among adults

Poll dates

Increase number of justices

Favor

Oppose

9/18-25/23

54

46

11/15-22/22

47

53

9/7-14/22

51

49

7/5-12/22

49

51

11/1-10/21

48

52

9/7-16/21

48

51

7/16-26/21

48

51

9/8-15/20

46

53

9/3-13/19

42

56

Marquette Law School Poll, national surveys

Question: How much do you favor or oppose a proposal to increase the number of justices on the U.S. Supreme Court?

About the Marquette Law School Poll

The survey was conducted Sept. 18-25, 2023, interviewing 1,007 adults nationwide, with a margin of error of +/-4.1 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 Poll website. Some items from this survey are held for later release.

Wording of questions about future and past 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.

The wording of questions about previous decisions includes:

Opinion of same-sex marriage decision:

  • In 2015, the Supreme Court ruled that the Constitution guarantees a right to same-sex marriage. How much do you favor or oppose this decision?

Opinion on anti-discrimination law protecting gay and transgender employees

  • 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?

Opinion of Dobbs decision, striking down Roe v. Wade

  • In 2022 the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, thus striking down the 1973 decision that made abortion legal in all 50 states. How much do you favor or oppose this decision?

Opinion of decision concerning possession of guns outside the home

  • In 2022, the Supreme Court ruled that, subject to some restrictions, the Second Amendment protects an individual’s right to carry a handgun for self-defense outside the home. How much do you favor or oppose this decision?

Opinion of decision banning use of race in college admissions

In 2023, the Supreme Court ruled that colleges cannot use race as a factor in deciding which applicants to admit. How much do you favor or oppose this decision?


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