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2017
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Enrolment figures, poll results and pre-survey nerves have encouraged wrong-headed punditry about marriage equality
2017
For years, opinion polls have shown overwhelming public support for same-sex marriage, but these results should provide limited comfort to the “yes” campaign. Approving of something is one thing, voting for it can be another, and Australians have a long tradition of casting their ballots at referendums not on the topic itself but on other things — such as the fact that they’ve been asked to cast the vote.
This paper is concerned with the congruence between public opinion and the positions taken by the legislators belonging to the major parties in Australia’s federal parliament. To do this we focus on a significant social transformation of our time, changes to the institution of marriage that has led to legalisation of same-sex marriage in 20 countries in less than two decades. Contrary to Downs’ (1957) median voter theorem and other office-motivated frameworks, federal politicians in Australia have largely ignored majority opinion on this matter, which is supportive of same-sex marriage (with most surveys showing approximately 60 per cent support and 30 per cent opposition). The (current) incumbent in particular, the Liberal-National Coalition, does not support same-sex marriage. We examine a number of possible reasons why parties may not be fully responsive, and explore the relationship between public opinion in each of Australia’s 150 federal electoral divisions and the position of its elected representative. To do this we use a unique data set to ascertain differences between politicians' positions on the issue with that of Australian voters. Using a very large dataset (n > 601,550) collected by Vox Pop Labs during the 2013 Australian federal election, this paper provides the first fine-grained analysis of attitudes about same-sex marriage from every federal electorate. We match these public opinion data with data on the public positions of members of the federal house of representatives since 2012. This enables us to compare the aggregates of citizens' policy preferences in each electoral district with the public positions of their elected representatives. We find that although there appears to be a status quo bias — with voter opposition well below 50 per cent required to tip legislators towards opposition — as well as some evidence that parties are (in part) policy-seeking organisations interested in more than maximising their vote, our results also suggest that parliamentarians are responsive to public opinion. Lower levels of opposition to same-sex marriage in an electorate was found to predict a lower probability of opposition from its MP. Further, originally oppositional parliamentarians representing electorates with less opposition to same-sex marriage were more likely to shift to a supportive position between 2012 and 2016.
Politics, 2018
The Australian public voted in November 2017 in favour of changing the law to allow for same-sex marriage-only the second such national popular vote after Ireland in 2015. Though 61.6% of the Australian public voting in the Marriage Law Postal Survey voted Yes in support of marriage equality, this support was not uniformly distributed across the country, with support at the electoral division level varying between 26.1% and 83.7%. What, then, explains such variation in support for same-sex marriage among the Australian public? In this article, we advance an aggregate, electoral division-level explanation of the Yes vote that links support for the legalisation of same-sex marriage to a set of local-level political and socio-demographic factors.
Politics, 2018
The Australian public voted in November 2017 in favour of changing the law to allow for same-sex marriage – only the second such national popular vote after Ireland in 2015. Though 61.6% of the Australian public voting in the Marriage Law Postal Survey voted Yes in support of marriage equality, this support was not uniformly distributed across the country, with support at the electoral division level varying between 26.1% and 83.7%. What, then, explains such variation in support for same-sex marriage among the Australian public? In this article, we advance an aggregate, electoral division-level explanation of the Yes vote that links support for the legalisation of same-sex marriage to a set of local-level political and socio-demographic factors.
Econ Journal Watch, 2015
We are pleased that Professors Allen and Price (2015) have continued to investigate the empirical connection between state laws that permit (or do not ban) same-sex unions/marriages and the possibility of adverse consequences for families. Using updated information about state laws, and using their preferred coding of that information, Professors Allen and Price have largely replicated our findings (Langbein and Yost 2009). In both investigations, same-sex marriage laws appear to have no adverse effects on families in the state where the laws operate. Both studies suffer from low power. More data and better research designs were not available when we wrote our study; we look forward to these improvements in the future.
Feminism & Psychology, 2014
This article uses a rhetorically informed thematic analysis to critically examine conservative arguments against same-sex marriage, as articulated in the British press at the time of a public consultation on marriage equality. Seven opposition arguments were identified: (1) marriage is by definition and tradition a union between a man and a woman; (2) marriage is designed as a framework for raising children; (3) if you allow gay marriage now, it will be polygamous and incestuous marriage next; (4) same-sex marriage would threaten the right to religious freedom; (5) same-sex couples already have equal rights; (6) changing the law to allow same-sex marriage would be undemocratic and (7) the government should focus on bigger priorities. Many of these arguments were a reworking of arguments previously used to oppose other forms of equality, although there was a notable absence of arguments explicitly based on assertions that homosexuality is immoral.
australianmarriageequality.com
Social Science Quarterly, 2019
Objective. This article assesses the evolution of U.S. opinion on same-sex marriage. Methods. The analysis used multinomial regression on same-sex marriage questions from eight surveys with more than 34,000 respondents by the Pew Research Center and the National Opinion Research Center (NORC) between 1988 and 2014. Multinomial logistic regression analysis tested five hypotheses about the effects of ideology, partisanship, religious intensity, contact with gays and lesbians, and education on support or opposition to same-sex marriage over three separate periods (1988, 2003-2013, 2013-2014). Results. Religious intensity, ideology, partisanship, contact with gays or lesbians, the Millennial generation, and being born again influenced opinion on same-sex marriage. Differences by region and religious affiliation declined in relative influence, whereas differences by religious and political values increased between 1988 and 2014. Support increased steadily from 1988. Conclusion. Opinion on same-sex marriage has shifted across all groups, but the increased gap in opinion presages continuing conflict. The laws and public opinion on same-sex marriage have evolved dramatically over the past 40 years (as epitomized by the approval of same-sex marriage by voters in Maryland 39 years after passing the first law to explicitly restrict marriage to men and women). Attitudes toward same-sex marriage reached majority status in 2012 (Daniels, 2013). On June 26, 2015, the U.S. Supreme Court extended same-sex marriage to all U.S. states and territories. By July 2017, support for same-sex marriage reached 62 percent, although state-by-state support varied from 41 percent in Alabama to 80 percent in Massachusetts (Pew Research Center, 2017; Public Religion Research Institute, 2017). Factors Influencing Opinion on Same-Sex Marriage Researchers have identified several demographic factors that explain attitudes toward same-sex marriage. In most studies, males, older respondents, Protestants, Catholics, church attenders, those with less education, lower-income respondents, African Americans, Latinos, married respondents, those from rural areas, and southerners all had lower support for same-sex marriage and were more likely to vote for bans on same-sex marriage (
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