Half think
abortion should be against the law in most or all cases
MURFREESBORO, Tenn. — Most Tennessee voters remain opposed to letting
gay couples marry legally, according to the first MTSU Poll taken since this
summer’s U.S. Supreme Court decision declaring same-sex marriage a
constitutional right.
Meanwhile, about
half of Tennessee voters think abortion should be against the law in most or
all cases, and attitudes on both issues break sharply along religious and
political party lines.
“Reflecting
patterns in previous MTSU Polls, opposition to the legality of both same-sex
marriage and abortion runs highest among Tennessee’s evangelical Christian and
Republican voters,” said Ken Blake, director of the poll at Middle Tennessee
State University. “In both groups, sizable majorities think it should be unlawful
for same-sex couples to marry and think abortion should be illegal in most or
all cases.”
The poll
randomly surveyed 603 registered voters statewide by telephone Oct. 25-27 and
has a margin of error of 4 percentage points.
Same-sex marriage
On the question
of same-sex marriage:
- 57 percent say they either “oppose” (18 percent)
or “strongly oppose” (39 percent) permitting same-sex marriage.
- 29 percent either “favor” (18 percent) or
“strongly favor” (11 percent) allowing such unions.
- A substantial 14 percent don’t know or decline
to answer.
Opposition to the
legality of same-sex marriage is especially strong among state voters who are evangelical
Christians, Republicans, and age 60 or older. In each of those groups, about two-thirds
of voters express opposition.
Same-sex
marriage finds majority support (62 percent) among non-evangelical voters in
Tennessee and falls just short of majority support (49 percent) among those age
18 to 34.
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The 57 percent
opposition to same-sex marriage found among Tennessee registered voters in this
latest poll is statistically equivalent to the 55 percent opposition found in
this past spring’s poll of all Tennessee adults.
It is
significantly higher, though, than the 38 percent opposition recorded
nationally by the Pew Research Center when it fielded the same question this
past July. In that poll, a 54 percent majority expressed support for
same-sex marriage, with only 7 percent undecided.
Abortion
Regarding
abortion:
- 53 percent of the state’s voters think abortion
should be against the law either in “most cases” (31 percent) or “all
cases” (22 percent).
- 39 percent think it should be legal in either
“most cases” (25 percent) or “all cases” (14 percent).
- Around 8 percent don’t know or decline to
answer.
As with opinions
on same-sex marriage, opinions on abortion break sharply along religious and
political lines. Sixty-two percent of evangelical Christians, and 70 percent of
Republicans, think abortion should be against the law in most or all cases. By
contrast, 58 percent of non-evangelicals, and 59 percent of Democrats, think
abortion should be legal in most or all cases.
Methodology
Interviews
for the poll were conducted by Issues & Answers Network Inc., which
completed 603 telephone surveys among a random sample of registered Tennessee
voters aged 18 and over.
Data was
collected using Tennessee statewide voter registration sample with a mix of 60
percent landline and 40 percent cell phones. The average interview length was
nine minutes.
Quotas by
gender and geographic region were implemented to ensure the sampled respondents
were representative of Tennessee’s adult population. U.S. Census Bureau data
were used to determine the gender distribution each of Tennessee’s Grand Divisions:
East, Middle and West. Data was weighted on age to ensure that it was
representative of Tennessee registered voters
The
survey’s margin of error is +/- 4 for the entire sample percentage points,
meaning that we are 95 percent confident that the actual result lies within 4
percentage points (in either direction) of the result our sample produced.
Subgroups have wider margins of error.
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