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Apologetics

Same-sex Marriage: Support growing (July 2014)

Poll shows growing support for same-sex marriage

Lisa Cox July 15, 2014

Liberal Party polling found that 72 per cent want same-sex marriage legalised, while 77 per cent think Coalition MPs should be granted a conscience vote on the matter.

Liberal Party polling found that 72 per cent want same-sex marriage legalised, while 77 per cent think Coalition MPs should be granted a conscience vote on the matter.Photo: Andrew Sheargold

Support among Australians for same-sex marriage and for a conscience vote in the Coalition has reached an all-time high, according to a survey by the Liberal Party’s own pollster.

A Crosby Textor poll, commissioned by Australian Marriage Equality, has found that 72 per cent of Australians want same-sex marriage legalised, while 77 per cent think Coalition MPs should be granted a conscience vote.

It comes a day after new Liberal Democratic Senator David Leyonhjelm challenged Prime Minister Tony Abbott to allow his MPs a free vote on same-sex marriage and said he would move a private member’s bill to amend the federal marriage act as soon as that happened.

The Crosby Textor poll is expected to bring a renewed push from marriage equality advocates, who will begin targeting Coalition MPs in earnest after growing public support for same-sex marriage and Sunday’s widely publicised interview with Ian Thorpe, in which Australia’s greatest Olympian confirmed he was gay.

The survey by the Liberal Party’s national pollster finds support for marriage equality is increasing among Australians, up from 65 per cent in a Nielsen poll last August.

It shows opposition to same-sex marriage has collapsed, with just one in five Australians or 21 per cent opposed, marking Parliament as increasingly out of step with the views of the majority of Australians.

According to the poll, support for same-sex marriage is now higher in Australia than it was in any other country, including New Zealand and Great Britain, when overseas parliaments have passed marriage equality laws.

The poll found that a majority of voters across a range of demographics and in almost every age group backed marriage reform.

A majority of respondents in each Australian state said they wanted to see marriage equality, as did a majority of Australians who identified with major religions, including Catholic, Anglican and non-Christian religions.

An overwhelming 85 per cent of respondents with children were pro-marriage equality.

The lowest results came from Australians aged over 65, at 48 per cent, and men over 55, at 42 per cent, but according to Crosby Textor more people in those groups were in favour of marriage equality than were opposed, with a significant proportion saying they were undecided.

Greens Senator Sarah Hanson-Young said on Monday that the time had come for the Parliament to act.

She said the first thing MPs could do was to support a bill to allow legal recognition in Australia of same-sex marriages entered into by Australian couples overseas.

The matter is the subject of a Senate inquiry, which is due to report in September.

Fairfax Media revealed last week that Australian same-sex couples wanting to marry in British consulates in Australia are facing extraordinary legal hurdles because of a lack legal recognition for overseas same-sex marriages and the Parliament’s failure to move on marriage reform.

”The new poll released today shows that overwhelmingly the majority of Australians want to see equality before the law,” Senator Hanson-Young said.

Labor frontbencher Penny Wong, who is openly gay, believes Australia is edging towards allowing gay marriage.

Senator Wong says Deputy Opposition Leader Tanya Plibersek has also flagged introducing a private member’s bill on gay marriage, however, any bill’s success was contingent on Mr Abbott allowing a conscience vote for coalition MPs.

”We don’t want this to fail again – we want a debate which has the capacity of a bill passing, and marriage equality being achieved,” Senator Wong told ABC radio on Monday.

Australian Marriage Equality national director Rodney Croome said: “With Australians across all key demographics supporting marriage equality in record numbers, it’s fair to say the public has made up its mind, the community debate has been won, and it’s time for politicians to act.”

After the federal government won a High Court Challenge to same-sex marriage laws in the ACT last year, marriage equality advocates drew up a hit list of 50 MPs in the federal Parliament they thought could be persuaded to support marriage equality, including senior ministers Julie Bishop, Joe Hockey and Christopher Pyne.

 http://m.smh.com.au/federal-politics/political-news/poll-shows-growing-support-for-samesex-marriage-20140714-3bxaj.html

Discussion

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  1. The poll was commissioned by Marriage Equity says it all. They commissioned one last year and the question was framed to give them the answer they wanted so the poll is useless and was in fact debunked because of the way the question was framed.

    Now if they asked “Do you believe that two men should be allowed to get married” the result would have been vastly different.

    OR

    Should two men be allowed to get married and raise children it would have definitely been a different result

    but they know that so that is why they don’t ask those questions.

    To confirm what I have said, nearly all the findings that homosexuals make better parents that mums and dads are commissioned or carried out by homosexuals. 56 of them have been debunked because they do not conform to scientific methodology.

    Asking Marriage Equality to commission a survey of this nature is like asking a vampire to work in a blood bank.

    Posted by Dick Tate | July 17, 2014, 11:52 am