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Hamilton College Hot Button Issues Poll: Guns, Gays and Abortion
Analysis
By Dennis Gilbert
Professor of Sociology, Hamilton College
The Hamilton College Hot Button Issues Poll explored the opinions of
this year's high school graduating class on guns, gays and
abortion. We selected high school seniors for this seventh in the
Hamilton Youth Poll series as representatives of a rising generation of
Americans and potential voters in November 2006. One thousand seniors
were contacted for the survey, designed by Hamilton researchers and
conducted in collaboration with the polling firm Zogby
International. (Additional methodological details are provided at
the end of this analysis).
The Hamilton Hot Button Issues Poll revealed that members of the high
school class of 2006 are twice as likely as adults to support legal
recognition of gay marriage. Three quarters of this year's
graduates favor recognition of same-sex marriages or civil
unions. The poll also found that support for strong handgun
control measures is almost universal among high school seniors. Though
liberal on gay and gun issues, this year's high school graduates
are remarkably conservative on the issues surrounding abortion.
We found that most high school seniors regard abortion as morally wrong
and would significantly limit a woman's right to choose.
ABORTION
The conservatism of the class of 2006 on abortion was the major
surprise in the poll, since previous Hamilton Youth Polls had shown
that high school students are typically liberal on public issues. When
they answered our most general questions on the issue, high school
seniors appeared supportive of abortion rights. Sixty-two percent
of seniors told us that they want the Supreme Court to preserve
the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision guaranteeing a woman's right to
abortion. About half described themselves as "pro-choice" and said they
believe that abortion should be legal in "all" or "most" cases.
But their answers to more detailed questions reveal that the great
majority of seniors would significantly restrict access to
abortion. For example, two thirds of high school seniors would
require parental permission before a woman under the age of 18 could
legally obtain an abortion.
We asked the seniors whether they thought a woman should have a legal
right to an abortion in the six specific circumstances listed in Table
1 -- all of them constitutionally protected under current law. We found
strong support for the right to abortion when a pregnancy represented a
serious threat to the woman's health or resulted from rape. But
the majority of high school seniors did not support the right to
abortion in any of the other four, fairly common
circumstances. Fewer than one in five seniors recognized the
right to abortion in all six.
Table
1. Support for Right to Abortion
|
Circumstance
|
Percent Supporting Right to Abortion
|
| Pregnancy
serious threat to woman's health
|
88.9
|
| Pregnancy
result of rape
|
80.9
|
|
Woman
under 18 and unmarried
|
49.2
|
|
Baby
will probably have serious birth defect
|
48.2
|
|
Family
poor, cannot afford more children
|
39.8
|
|
Woman
married, doesn't want more children
|
28.5
|
Answers to other questions in the poll suggest that these opinions
about the legal issues surrounding abortion are influenced by strong
pro-life sentiments. Two thirds of the seniors told us they
believe abortion is always or usually "morally wrong." Asked whether a high school senior who becomes pregnant should keep the
baby, give it up for adoption or have an abortion, 26 percent suggested
the first and 54 percent the second alternative. Only 13 percent
proposed abortion. An open-ended question on this same topic in a
preliminary pilot poll elicited similar responses. In rejecting
the abortion option, many students stressed the girl's moral
responsibility. "She took the chance of having sex," noted
one. "She made a decision and needs to live with it,"
insisted another. But none of the students referred to her male
partner's moral responsibility.
Many high school students are not strangers to this issue. Half the
females and 36 percent of the males polled say they know someone who
has had an abortion. We asked females whether they would "consider"
abortion if they became pregnant in high school and males whether they
would want their partner to do so. The response from 70 percent
of females and 67 percent of males was "No." However, the
relatively high proportions of seniors who know someone who has had an
abortion suggests they might themselves be more open to it if faced
with a real decision about their own lives and futures. But being
compelled to consider abortion would obviously be painful for most high
school seniors.
GAY ISSUES
In contrast to their views on abortion, the great majority of the high
school class of 2006 holds liberal, pro-gay opinions. Eighty
percent think the law should protect gays against job
discrimination. Regarding the issue that has roiled courts and
legislatures in recent years, three-quarters of seniors support some
form of legal recognition for gay relationships (Table 2). More
than half would recognize same-sex marriages. An additional 20 percent
would permit gay couples to form "civil unions giving them the legal
rights of married couples in areas such as inheritance, health
insurance, pension coverage and hospital visiting privileges." Nearly
two-thirds of seniors told us that same-sex couples should be allowed
to adopt children. Support for a constitutional amendment banning
same-sex marriage is predictably thin among high school seniors. (Question wording and more detailed statistics are presented in the Appendix).
Members of the class of 2006 were similarly pro-gay in their responses
to a series of items designed to measure positive and negative
attitudes toward gay men and lesbians. Almost eighty percent thought
gay people should be "accepted by society." Seventy percent
agreed with the statement, "Gay people contribute in unique and
positive ways to society." (See Table 3). Measured by an
index of attitudes toward gays averaging responses to these
items, 70 percent of high school seniors are "pro-gay, " including
22 percent who can be considered "very pro-gay."
Table 2. Opinion on Gay Issues
|
|
Percent
|
Support
gay marriage
Support
civil unions
Oppose both
|
53.6
20.1
24.6
|
|
Support
amendment to constitution
banning gay marriage.
|
25.8
|
|
Support
adoption by same sex couples.
|
63.0
|
Table
3. Attitudes Toward Gays
Percent Pro-Gay |
|
70.9
|
Gay people
contribute in unique and important ways to society
|
| 79.7 |
Lesbian
women should be accepted by society. |
77.7
|
Gay men
should be accepted by society. |
52.1
|
It would be
better if gay people kept their sexual orientation hidden. |
59.6
|
Gay
lifestyles are morally wrong (% disagree) |
| 71.9 |
Lesbians are
disgusting (% disagree) |
65.9
|
Gay men are
disgusting (% disagree) |
Approximately 20 percent of high school seniors are staunchly anti-gay
-- that is, they reject both gay marriage and civil unions and hold
negative attitudes toward gays, as measured by our index. Over 80 percent of anti-gay seniors believe that
"homosexual relations between consenting adults" should be illegal and
regard gay people as "disgusting." Both attitudes are rare
among seniors, outside this anti-gay minority. Many of our
respondents thought the very notion of labeling gays "disgusting" was
laughable. Anti-gay seniors are typically observant and born-again
Christians, who view homosexuality as a moral or religious issue.
This poll is the second in the Hamilton Youth Poll series to measure
the attitudes of high school seniors toward gays and gay issues. The
more detailed Hamilton Gay Issues Poll was conducted in 2001.
Comparison of the two polls does not suggest significant changes in
attitudes.[1] (See Table 4. More detailed statistics and question wording are presented in the Appendix).
Table
4. Handgun Control Measures
| Percent favoring measure |
|
| 53.4 |
Make
laws governing the sale of firearms stricter |
| 88.4 |
Require
5-day waiting period between purchase and delivery of handguns |
95.7
|
Register
all handguns at time of purchase |
| 63.4 |
Raise
age for legal purchase of handgun from 18 to 21. |
| 30.9 |
Ban
handguns possession except by police and other authorized personnel. |
Our poll found that many high school seniors had direct or indirect
experience with firearms. About half indicated that they had fired a
gun. A disturbingly high proportion, 35 percent, told us that they knew
of someone at their school who had been shot at or threatened with a
gun. Surprisingly, neither condition had much influence on opinion
about gun control. Those who had fired a gun were less supportive of
the general notion of stricter gun control but, like others polled,
overwhelmingly favored the key registration and waiting period
measures. Those who reported threats or shootings at their school were
statistically indistinguishable from their classmates.
A previous Hamilton survey, the Youth and Guns Poll conducted in 2000,
took a more detailed look at high school students' experiences with
guns and their opinions about gun control. The earlier study also
found near universal support for the most commonly proposed control
measures, including several not included in the current poll. Although
the majority favoring stricter gun laws in their response to the
generic question was about 10 percent higher in the first study, the
percentages supporting the registration and waiting period measures
were almost exactly the same. Because the Youth and Guns Poll surveyed
high school sophomores and juniors in addition to seniors, the two
studies are not strictly compatible.
GENDER, RACE, CHURCH, AND OTHER VARIATIONS
This section uses the three questions below to gauge demographic
variation among high school seniors on the issues explored in our poll.[2]
Abortion --Do you think abortion should be legal in all cases, legal in most cases, illegal in most cases, or illegal in all cases?
Gay Rights -- Would you support or oppose a law that would allow same sex couples to get married?
Gun Control -- In general, do you feel that laws covering the
sale of firearms should be made more strict, less strict or kept as
they are now?
The responses of seniors in various demographic subgroups to these
questions are compared in Table 5. The abortion column gives the
percentage of seniors in each subgroup who think abortion should be
legal in all or most cases; the gay rights column, the percentage who
would support gay marriage and the gun control column, the percentage
who feel gun laws should be more strict . (For the distribution of
seniors across demographic categories see the Appendix).
As the table suggests, gender and race are generally weak
predictors of student opinion on these three issues. It is, however,
worth noting that males (especially white males) are more conservative
on gun control, and blacks are significantly less supportive of gay
marriage than whites or Hispanics.
The table shows that religion and reported church attendance are
powerful influences on abortion and gay marriage opinions. Among high
school
seniors, born-again Christians and those who attend services four or
more times a month are notably more conservative on these two issues.
The nation's Catholic bishops will not be pleased to learn that this
cohort of young Catholics is about average among their peers on the
abortion issue. But they may find some consolation in the wide gap
separating two groups of Catholic students: the typically pro-life
seniors who attend mass regularly and those who don't.[3]
As in previous Hamilton Youth Polls, in the current poll, the South
and Central regions appear more conservative. But the distinctly
conservative tilt of Southern students evident in the table, especially
on the gay marriage issue, reflects the high proportion of born-again
Christians in the region. Thirty-seven percent of our Southern
respondents described themselves as born again. Without them, 59
percent of Southerners would recognize abortion rights in all/most
cases and 54 percent would support gay marriage.
The political geography of opinion on our three issues was mapped by
dividing the Class of 2006 into residents of Blue, Gray and Red states.
Blue states are those in which the Democratic presidential candidate
received more than 55 percent of the major party vote in 2004. Red
states are the corresponding Republican strongholds. The more closely
contested Gray states will presumably decide future elections. The
cleavages separating Blue and Red state seniors on these three issues
parallel the gaps between Democrats and Republicans shown at the end of
the table. More interesting are the opinions of the 40 percent of high
school seniors who live in the 19 Gray states. Republican leaders will
be pleased to learn that these seniors are closest to their peers in
the Republican-oriented Red states on all three issues.
Table 5. Demographic Differences
|
Abortion
Rights
|
Gay
Marriage
|
Gun
Control
|
|
ALL
Males
Females
|
53
54
52
|
54
49
58
|
54
46
61
|
|
White
Black
Hispanic
|
51
57
52
|
54
39
61
|
48
71
72
|
|
Born
Again
Other
Protestant
Catholic
Other
Religion
No
Religion
|
32
52
51
70
80
|
30
46
59
60
88
|
44
54
55
65
61
|
|
Attends Church
0 - 3x
/ mo.
Over 3x / mo.
|
68
38
|
71
36
|
55
52
|
|
Northeast
South
Central
West
|
61
48
48
58
|
63
43
53
58
|
58
55
46
59
|
|
Blue State
Gray State
Red State
|
65
50
44
|
65
50
47
|
62
49
52
|
Democrat
Republican
Other/Not
Sure
|
71
54
30
|
68
56
34
|
65
53
40
|
COMPARISONS WITH ADULTS
Comparisons between our survey and recent adult polls indicate that the
high school class of 2006 is conservative on abortion and liberal on
gun control like older Americans, but far more liberal than adults on
gay issues.
National polls conducted by media organizations and university
researchers reveal that about 50 percent of adults would describe
themselves as "pro-choice" and more than 60 percent say they would not
want to see the Roe v. Wade decision overturned. But the majority also
regards abortion as morally wrong and would not concede a woman's legal
right to abortion except in extreme circumstances, such as rape or
significant threat to the health of the mother. This is precisely the
inconsistent, conservative leaning pattern we have found in the Class
of 2006.[4]
With
respect to gun control, more than 50 percent of American adults,
responding to the same generic question used in our poll, say gun
control laws should be stricter. Support for specific gun control
measures is substantially higher. [5] Again the pattern is similar to what we found among current high school seniors.[6]
Because of the intense current political interest in the issue,
there has been extensive polling on gay marriage in 2005. Several
surveys conducted this year, employing language similar to our own,
found that support for legal recognition of gay marriage was limited to
20 to 27 percent of adults. The higher figure is half what we recorded
among high school seniors. On the other hand, adult support for a
constitutional amendment banning gay marriage ranges from 45 to 54
percent in recent polls, compared to 26 percent of high school seniors.[7]
CONDUCTING THE HAMILTON HOT BUTTON ISSUES POLL
The Hamilton College Hot Button Issues Poll is the seventh in a series
of national youth surveys conducted by Hamilton faculty and students.
These studies are intended to take advantage of the academic expertise
of faculty and the life experience of Hamilton students. Most funding
for these surveys is provided by Hamilton's Arthur Levitt Public
Affairs Center, which paid all costs for the survey analyzed here.
The Hot Button Issues Poll was designed and analyzed by Hamilton
Sociology Professor Dennis Gilbert and the Hamilton students whose
names are listed on the inside cover page of this report. The sampling
and calling were administered by the polling firm Zogby International
and done in two phases. The first was a 100-call pilot survey,
conducted in October 2005. Calls for this phase were made by the
Hamilton student researchers at Zogby International facilities. On the
basis of the results from the pilot study, the questionnaire was
rewritten by the Hamilton team. The redesigned questionnaire was
administered to a national sample of 1,000 high school seniors in calls
made from November 10 to 20, 2005, by Zogby International.
In theory, a random sample of 1,000 is accurate within plus or minus 3
percentage points. However, obtaining a random national sample of
high school seniors is more difficult than drawing a national sample of
adults or households. The demographics of the second stage data suggest
that a trustworthy national sample was obtained. For the analysis
presented here, the sample was reweighted for sex and region. Because
the original sample was reasonably representative, these adjustments
had little effect on the results. Non-sampling problems, such as
unintended ambiguities in questionnaire language and less than candid
responses, can also affect survey accuracy.
Footnotes:
[1] In the current poll, high school seniors are equally likely to
agree that "homosexual relations" should be legal; slightly more likely
to favor protection for gays against job discrimination; and slightly
less likely to accept adoption by same-sex couples. They are eight
percent less supportive of gay marriage, but differences in the
question used make this comparison problematic. The 2001 survey
did not ask about civil unions.
[2] Taken by themselves, these questions are,
in an absolute sense, problematic measures of opinion, but they are
useful here for the purpose of comparing population groups.
[3] Sixty-two percent of those who attend
services fewer than 4 times a month, but only 41 percent of those who
attend more frequently, agreed that abortion should be legal in all or
most circumstances. The two groups are respectively 55 and 45 percent
of the Catholic students polled.
[4]The adult surveys were conducted by Gallup, Gallup for CNN/USA Today, Fox News, Time/CNN, CBS, and Pew, from 2003 to 2005.
[5]Adult polling on gun control was done by Gallup,
CBS, Harris, and the National Opinion Research Center at the University
of Chicago (General Social Survey) from 2003 to 2005.
[6] Comparisons between the 2000 Hamilton
Guns and Youth Poll and adult polls conducted about the same time,
suggested that the high school students were somewhat more liberal than
adults on gun issues. Neither our own data from the current poll nor
the currently available adult statistics permit precise comparison
today.
[7]The marriage and amendment comparisons were with adult polls conducted in 2005 by ABC/Washington Post, CBS/The New York Times and Gallup for CNN/USA Today, and the Boston Globe.
|
Hot Button Issues Poll: Guns, Gays and Abortion Developed by: Dennis Gilbert, Professor of Sociology Chad B. Holtzman '06 Elaine Martinez '07 Brian P. McFadden '07 Terence J. Reynolds '07 Karen T. Richardson '06 Zarrette J. Rogers '08 Luciano Sclafani '08 Nathan L. Vandergrift '08 Lynn S. Wetzel '07
Conducted in collaboration with: Zogby International
Supported by: The Arthur Levitt Public Affairs Center at Hamilton College
|