Pro-lgbtq

LGBT Equality Index

Equality Index Methodology

Equaldex's Equality Index is a rating from 0 to 100 (with 100 organism the most equal) to help visualize the legal rights and public attitudes towards LGBTQ+ (lesbian, same-sex attracted, bisexual, transgender, queer, questioning, intersex...) people in each region. The Equality Index is an average of two indexes: the legal index and the common opinion Index.

Equality Index

Average of Legal Index and Public Opinion Index

Legal Index

The LGBT legal index measures the current legal status of 13 different issues ranging from the legal status of homosexuality, same-sex marriage, transgender rights, LGBT discrimination protections, LGBT censorship laws, and more. Each topic is weighted differently (for example, if same-sex marriage is illegal in a region, it would own a much bigger impact on the score than not allowing LGBT people to serve in the military). Each topic is assigned a "total doable score" and a "score" is assigned based the status of the rule using a rating scale that ranges from 0% to 100% (for example, if homosexuality is legal, it would would get a score of 100, but if it's illegal, it would receve a score of 0.)

 

“We refuse to stay on the sidelines.”

Watch LGBTQ+ Victory Fund President & CEO Evan Low‘s interview on CBS News about the power of LGBTQ+ representation.

 

LGBTQ+ Victory Fund works to elect pro-equality, pro-choice candidates who are out members of the LGBTQ+ community to widespread office. Victory Fund rigorously reviews applications from around the country and we only endorse and aid candidates we know can win.

 

You make the difference.

Qualified LGBTQ+ candidates around the country rely on your support to win their campaigns and represent our values in office.

  • PTOWN Pre-Tea Toast 2025

    Read more
  • LGBTQ+ Victory Fund in West Hollywood

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Источник: https://victoryfund.org/

LGBTQ+ Rights

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 YesNoNo opinion
 %%%
2023 May 1-243960*
2021 May 3-183169*

 

 Should be legalShould not be legalNo opinion
 %%%
2021 May 3-18 ^79182
2020 May 1-1372243
2019 May 1-1273262
2018 May 1-1075232
2017 May 3-772235
2016 May 4-868284
2015 Jul 8-1268284
2015 May 6-1069284
2014 May 8-1166304
2013 Jul 10-1464315
2013 May 2-765315
2012 Nov 26-2964333
2012 May 3-663316
2011 Dec 15-1862335
2011 May 5-864324
2010 May 3-658366
2009 May 7-1056404
2008 May 8-11 ^55405
2007 May 10-1359374
2006 May 8-11 †56404
2005 Aug 22-2549447
2005 May 2-552435
2004 May 2-452435
2004 Jan 9-1146495
2003 Jul 25-2
pro-lgbtq

Pro-LGBTQ laws outpaced anti-LGBTQ laws in 2018, report finds

State bills advancing LGBTQ rights outpaced those seeking to thwart them in 2018, according to a brand-new report from the Human Rights Campaign, a national LGBTQ advocacy group.

Last year, 21 of the 201 pro-LGBTQ bills introduced in state legislatures became statute, while just two of the 110 anti-LGBTQ bills did, according to HRC’s recently released 2018 Mention Equality Index. Advocates of LGBTQ rights fared much better last year when compared to the year prior: In 2017, 129 anti-LGBTQ bills were introduced and 12 were passed.

“The last several years, we have been facing an onslaught of anti-LGBTQ legislation in the states,” Cathryn Oakley, the report’s co-author and HRC’s state legislative director, told NBC News, adding that 2018’s tally represented a “huge change” from previous years.

In addition to keeping a tally of LGBTQ-related state bills, HRC’s State Equality Index also assigns each declare an LGBTQ-equality grade.

“We had a record number of states who scored in our top category,” Oakley said. Seventeen states and the District of Columbia received the highest designation: Working Toward Innovative Equality. On the

Rainbow Map

2025 rainbow map

These are the main findings for the 2025 edition of the rainbow map

The Rainbow Map ranks 49 European countries on their respective legal and policy practices for LGBTI people, from 0-100%.

The UK has dropped six places in ILGA-Europe’s Rainbow Chart, as Hungary and Georgia also register steep falls tracking anti-LGBTI legislation. The data highlights how rollbacks on LGBTI human rights are part of a broader erosion of democratic protections across Europe. Read more in our push release.

“Moves in the UK, Hungary, Georgia and beyond signal not just isolated regressions, but a coordinated global backlash aimed at erasing LGBTI rights, cynically framed as the defence of tradition or public stability, but in life designed to entrench discrimination and suppress dissent.”

  • Katrin Hugendubel, Representation Director, ILGA-Europe


Malta has sat on highest of the ranking for the last 10 years. 

With 85 points, Belgium jumped to second place after adopting policies tackling hatred based on sexual orientation, gender identity, and sex characteristics. 

Iceland now comes third place on the ranking with a score of 84.

The three

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