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Thursday, December 4, 2008  |  4 Comments [ View ]

Poll: Calif. gay marriage ban driven by religion

By LISA LEFF

SAN FRANCISCO -- Voters' economic status and religious convictions played a greater role than race and age in determining whether they supported the Nov. 4 ballot measure outlawing same-sex marriage in California, a new poll shows.

The ban drew its strongest support from both evangelical Christians and voters who didn't attend college, according to results released Wednesday by the Public Policy Institute of California.

Age and race, meanwhile, were not as strong factors as assumed. According to the poll, 56 percent of voters over age 55 and 57 percent of nonwhite voters cast a yes ballot for the gay marriage ban.

People who identified themselves as practicing Christians were highly likely to support the constitutional amendment, with 85 percent of evangelical Christians, 66 percent of Protestants and 60 percent of Roman Catholics favoring it.

The poll also showed that the measure got strong backing from voters who did not attend college (69 percent), voters who earned less than $40,000 a year (63 percent) and Latinos (61 percent).

The proposition, which passed with 52 percent of the vote, overturned the state Supreme Court's May decision legalizing gay marriage in California. The measure inserts language into the constitution limiting marriage to one man and one woman.

The poll found that, overall, 48 percent of voters oppose the idea of making gay marriage legal. Forty-seven percent support it, while 5 percent are undecided.

The results mirror previous PPIC polls from the last three years, suggesting that the $73 million spent for and against the measure did not do much to change public attitudes on allowing gay couples to wed, said survey director Mark Baldassare.

"At no point in time, before or after the election, did we have a majority of Californians saying they supported gay marriage," Baldassare said. "My takeaway from this is that until there is a major shift in public opinion one way or another, it's going to be another issue where voters are deeply divided."

Geoffrey Kors, executive director of the gay rights group Equality California, said the PPIC poll demonstrates that same-sex marriage advocates "need to make inroads in every category. If 2 percent of voters had voted differently, we would have had a different result," he said.

The poll was based on a phone survey of 2,003 California voters in the Nov. 4 election who were interviewed from Nov. 5-6. The sampling error was plus or minus 2 percentage points.





 4 Comments

By: Jim @ 12/04/2008, 9:43 PM

If 2 percent of voters had voted differently, we would have had a different result," he said. Well duh! And if you score more points, runs, and goals than the other guy in any sport you win! Well you lost. If frogs had wings, they wouldn't bump their butt! You can wish all you want, the truth about Marriage is one between a Man and Women..no matter what you want it too be. Thats why we have votes in a democracy to see who will win and who has the best strategy to win....you all lost so stop whinning!

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By: Scott @ 12/04/2008, 9:06 PM

So, the Mormons are not responsible for Proposition 8 passing after all the hate directed at them.

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By: HHmm.... @ 12/04/2008, 7:42 PM

I would think the reason for the ban is its gross to suck a rope or have a big shlong stuck up your a$$, I never took economic factors into the reason for queerism to be right or wrong????????

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By: LM @ 12/04/2008, 7:33 PM

Unfortunately I presently live in California. The problem I have with the NO on * protesters is that they seem to want to raise a stink against the Mormon church and are striking out the most at The Mormon church. Yet other religions were just as active. But as one reporter said in the local paper here says "gay rights groups and their allies are the aggressors in the culture war. Indeed, they admit to being "forces of change" and the "agents of progress." The y proudly want to rewrite tradition and overturn laws. But whenever they're challenged democratically and peaceably, they instantly complain of being victims of entrenched bigots, even as they adopt the very tactics abhor." ( They have attacked the Church, Temples and Meeting houses. The gay activists don't want The Church to push their beliefs on them, but they are doing whatever and however they can to push their beliefs on others. The article also says that The pro-gay activists have lists of businesses to boycott-- Mormon blacklists.

Okay, the gay activists have their beliefs, but why try to force pro-marriage activists into their beliefs? When from the beginning of time, it has always been marriage between a "MAN AND A WOMAN". Period.

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