GALLUP NEWS SERVICE
PRINCETON, NJ -- There are a great number of issues that arise in the normal discourse of American political life, and that number expands in a hotly contested election year such as this one. Many issues are complex and involved, but it is sometimes useful to distill them into simple for/against choices as if they were on the ballot on Election Day.
In a poll conducted this past weekend, October 25-28, Gallup asked Americans if they would vote for or against a variety of twenty different proposals. Many of the issues tested in this referendum format were the same as those asked in a similar referendum four years ago, while others were distilled from the topics and issues in the news of this campaign year. The twenty propositions, of course, include only a sampling of potential proposals which could be put before Congress, but they serve as a representative list of the types of concerns with which elected representatives, candidates for office and average Americans often find themselves grappling.
The results of this referendum process show once again the difficulty of attempting to assign broad labels to the American population. The people have decidedly mixed views overall, and the results show that over two-thirds of the American people say they would vote "for" both a number of what could be considered traditionally conservative issues, as well as what could also be considered liberal propositions.
For example, super-majorities of Americans favor mandatory testing of public school teachers and students, raising the minimum wage, stiffer penalties for hate crimes, across-the-board tax cuts, keeping abortion legal, licensing new handguns, prayer in the public schools and privatizing part of Social Security. A majority of Americans also favor a ban on "partial birth" abortions and support reducing the size of government. The public is divided on several other questions, ranging from an assault weapons ban to oil exploration in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska.
Traditionally Liberal Issues
Large majorities of the public support proposals with a
traditionally liberal bent:
- Eighty-six percent of Americans support raising the minimum age by one dollar per hour. Although this idea is widely supported by almost everyone, women are more likely to be in favor of a minimum wage hike than are men -- 76% of men would vote "for," compared to 87% of women.
- Mandatory licensing and registration of new handgun purchases receives majority support from the public, as 72% of Americans say they would vote for such a proposal.
- More than two-thirds of the public (67%) say that, if they had the opportunity, they wouldnotvote to overturn the Supreme Court decision on abortion (Roe vs. Wade).
- Eighty-three percent of Americans say they would support a law that gave harsher penalties to perpetrators of hate crimes. Women are more united on this issue than are men -- 88% of women favor such legislation, compared with 78% of men.
Americans Also Support Issues Associated With a
Conservative Perspective
Sixty-nine percent of Americans say they would vote for a
constitutional amendment to allow prayer in public schools. Women
are more likely than men to support such a measure -- 74% of women
favor prayer in public schools, compared to 64% of men.
- Sixty-three percent of Americans favor a ban on partial birth abortion. This is not a particularly partisan issue -- 67% of Republicans support the idea, compared to 59% of Democrats.
- A majority of Americans are opposed to a proposal creating legal civil unions between homosexual couples -- 54% say that they would vote against such a law, while 42% say they would vote for this proposal. This controversial issue is highly partisan. Democrats are twice as likely as Republicans to support the civil unions proposal (54% vs. 25%).
- A large majority of Americans is against allowing states to have racial and gender preferences in hiring and school admissions -- 85% did not favor the racial preferences proposal and 86% did not favor the gender preferences proposal.
- Most Americans (78%) would vote for an across-the-board tax cut.
- A smaller but still significant majority would vote to reduce the size and budget ofallgovernment agencies (62%). Support for both of these ideas, however, varies according to party identification. Eighty-nine percent of Republicans favor broad tax cuts, compared with 69% of Democrats. Seventy-two percent of Republicans support a reduction in the size of government agencies, compared to 54% of Democrats.
Public Divided on Oil Exploration and
Immigration
Three of the proposals on Gallup's issue referendum received mixed
support from the public.
- Forty-four percent of Americans say they are in favor of exploring the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska for oil, while 50% are opposed. This issue of Alaskan oil drilling reveals substantial gender and partisan gap. Fifty-two percent of men say they would vote for this proposal, compared with just 37% of women. Less than a third of Democrats (30%) say they are in favor of explorations, compared with 63% of Republicans. Those who have been following the news about this issue closely are more likely to support the idea than those who have not (51% vs. 36%) -- mostly because Republicans are more likely to be following the issue than are Democrats.
- Curtailing the level of legal immigration in this country is also met with mixed support. Forty-three percent of Americans say they would stop most legal immigration, while 51% say they would not vote for such a proposal.
Three Education Propositions Receive Majority
Support
Seventy-five percent of Americans say they would support a law
mandating national standardized tests in public schools every year.
Republicans and Democrats are about equally likely to support this
proposal.
- Almost all Americans -- 95% -- favor a law that would require new public school teachers to pass competency tests.
- Fifty-six percent of Americans support the idea of giving parents government funded school vouchers to pay for tuition at private schools.
The tables that follow indicate support for these issues by gender and party identification:
The Gender Gap: support for the twenty issues among men and women |
|||
Men- |
|||
Men |
Women |
Women |
|
"for" |
"for" |
"for" |
|
Issue |
% |
% |
% |
Re-establishing relations with Cuba |
67 |
46 |
21 |
Oil exploration in Alaska |
52 |
37 |
15 |
Reducing government agencies |
64 |
60 |
4 |
Racial preferences |
15 |
11 |
4 |
Privatizing Social Security |
68 |
65 |
3 |
Targeted tax cuts |
54 |
51 |
3 |
Gender preferences |
12 |
9 |
3 |
Mandatory teacher testing |
95 |
95 |
0 |
Public school testing |
75 |
75 |
0 |
School vouchers |
56 |
56 |
0 |
Overturning Roe vs Wade |
30 |
30 |
0 |
Across-the-board tax cuts |
77 |
78 |
-1 |
Assault weapons ban |
58 |
60 |
-2 |
Stopping legal immigration |
42 |
45 |
-3 |
Banning "partial birth" abortion |
61 |
65 |
-4 |
Legalization of civil unions |
39 |
45 |
-6 |
Hate crime legislation |
78 |
88 |
-10 |
Prayer in public schools |
64 |
74 |
-10 |
Raising minimum wage |
76 |
87 |
-11 |
Licensing of new handguns |
71 |
83 |
-12 |
The Party Gap: support for the twenty issues among Republicans, Democrats and Independents |
||||
Rep- |
||||
Rep |
Dem |
Dem |
ind. |
|
"for" |
"for" |
"for" |
"for" |
|
Issue |
% |
% |
% |
% |
Privatizing Social Security |
85 |
51 |
34 |
70 |
Oil exploration in Alaska |
63 |
30 |
33 |
41 |
Overturning Roe vs Wade |
45 |
20 |
25 |
28 |
School vouchers |
68 |
46 |
22 |
57 |
Across-the-board tax cuts |
89 |
69 |
20 |
80 |
Reducing government agencies |
72 |
54 |
18 |
63 |
Prayer in public schools |
76 |
66 |
10 |
64 |
Banning "partial birth" abortion |
67 |
59 |
8 |
67 |
Public school testing |
79 |
72 |
7 |
76 |
Mandatory teacher testing |
94 |
95 |
-1 |
96 |
Stopping legal immigration |
41 |
45 |
-4 |
42 |
Gender preferences |
6 |
15 |
-9 |
7 |
Re-establishing relations with Cuba |
50 |
61 |
-11 |
54 |
Assault weapons ban |
51 |
64 |
-13 |
60 |
Racial preferences |
6 |
19 |
-13 |
11 |
Hate crime legislation |
75 |
90 |
-15 |
79 |
Licensing of new handguns |
68 |
83 |
-15 |
78 |
Raising minimum wage |
71 |
90 |
-19 |
82 |
Targeted tax cuts |
37 |
65 |
-28 |
46 |
Legalization of civil unions |
25 |
54 |
-29 |
46 |
Survey Methods
The results are based on telephone interviews with a randomly selected national sample of 1,004 adults, 18 years and older, conducted October 25-28, 2000. For results based on this sample, one can say with 95 percent confidence that the maximum error attributable to sampling and other random effects is plus or minus 3 percentage points. In addition to sampling error, question wording and practical difficulties in conducting surveys can introduce error or bias into the findings of public opinion polls.