Voters Reject Trump’s Plan to Eliminate 988 Crisis Services for LGBTQ+ Youth

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New Poll Finds a Strong, Bipartisan Majority of Voters Reject the Trump Administration’s Plan to Eliminate 988’s Specialized Services for LGBTQ+ Youth 

Nearly 7 in 10 voters, including majorities across party lines, say that the U.S. government should keep the specialized services in place.

A new Data for Progress poll finds that the Trump administration’s leaked plan to eliminate crisis intervention services for LGBTQ+ youth faces wide, bipartisan opposition.

In 2022, the federal government established the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline, which enables anyone experiencing a mental health crisis to call or text 988 and be connected with a trained counselor. The 988 Lifeline also offers specialized crisis services for populations at higher risk for suicide, like LGBTQ+ youth and veterans, connecting them directly with crisis counselors who have been specifically trained to support them.

After being provided with information about 988, voters were asked whether the U.S. government should eliminate Lifeline’s specialized crisis services for LGBTQ+ youth. A strong majority of voters (69%) — including 56% of Republicans, 70% of Independents, and 80% of Democrats — say that the U.S. government should keep these services in place. In comparison, less than 1 in 4 voters (23%) say the government should eliminate them.

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According to a 2024 national survey by The Trevor Project, 39% of LGBTQ+ young people had seriously considered attempting suicide in the previous year, including 46% of transgender and nonbinary young people. Notably, it was President Donald Trump who originally signed the National Suicide Hotline Designation Act into law toward the end of his first term in 2020. The act officially shortened the hotline’s 10-digit number to 988 requiring the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration to report to Congress on strategies to establish specialized services for LGBTQ+ youth and other high-risk populations.

Read the full polling brief here.

Methodology

From May 30 to June 1, 2025, Data for Progress conducted a survey of 1,232 U.S. likely voters nationally using web panel respondents. The sample was weighted to be representative of likely voters by age, gender, education, race, geography, and recalled presidential vote. The survey was conducted in English. The margin of error associated with the sample size is ±3 percentage points. Results for subgroups of the sample are subject to increased margins of error. Partisanship reflected in tabulations is based on self-identified party affiliation, not partisan registration. For more information please visit dataforprogress.org/our-methodology.

About Data for Progress

Data for Progress is a progressive think tank and polling firm, that arms movements with data-driven tools to fight for a more equitable future. DFP provides polling, data-driven messaging, and policy generation for the progressive movement, advising campaigns and candidates with the tools they need to win. Learn more at dataforprogress.org or follow DFP on X at @dataprogress.

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