Monday, Sep 02, 2013
 

3 Reasons Polls May Be Overstating Support for  Same-Sex Marriage
 



 
 
 
By _Napp  Nazworth_ (http://www.christianpost.com/author/napp-nazworth/) 
 
Polls may be showing greater support for same-sex marriage than actually  
exists. Due to question wording, priming (the question that comes before the  
same-sex marriage question), and a social desirability effect (people will 
not  tell a pollster how they really feel if they think their response is 
unpopular),  support for same-sex marriage could actually be lower than what 
many recent  polls indicate, according to political scientist Michael J. New 
and sociologist  Mark Regnerus. 
Question Wording 
In public opinion polls, question wording matters. When polling questions  
make reference to "rights" as they ask about support for same-sex marriage,  
support can be 10 percentage points higher than when a more neutral 
question is  asked, New, assistant professor of political science at University 
of 
Michigan –  Dearborn, _points out for Catholic Vote_ 
(http://www.catholicvote.org/how-surveys-overstate-support-for-same-sex-marriage/)
 . 
The reason for the difference is that the question wording itself suggests 
to  the respondent how they should think about their answer. Not everyone 
has well  formed opinions on the topic. Many are ambivalent, unsure of how 
exactly they  feel about same-sex marriage. So, suggesting to these respondents 
that they  should think about the issue in terms of "rights" could show 
greater support for  same-sex marriage than actually exists. 
This is especially true if respondents are only given two options – support 
 or do not support. When given a third option – "unsure" – one in four  
18-to-39-year-olds chose it, Regnerus, associate professor of sociology at the 
 University of Texas at Austin, _pointed out for National Review_ 
(http://www.nationalreview.com/article/356220/right-side-history-or-primed-say-yes-mar
k-regnerus) . 
There could be a great deal more ambivalence about same-sex marriage than  
recent news reports indicate because many pollsters are not giving 
respondents  the opportunity to indicate they are ambivalent. 
Priming 
"Priming" is when the question asked before the question of interest 
suggests  to the respondent how they should think about their answer. Also due 
to  
ambivalence, priming can cause significant variations in polling outcomes. 
The question that comes before the question about same-sex marriage,  
therefore, could influence polling on same-sex marriage. Regnerus notes that  
Gallup continues to ask a question about the legality of gay or lesbian  
relations, even though the Supreme Court has struck down laws against sodomy by 
 
consenting adults. 
Looking at past data, Regnerus found that asking that priming question can  
contribute to about a six or seven percentage point increase in support 
shown  for same-sex marriage. 
Social Desirability Effect 
Some respondents may not be telling pollsters how they really feel about  
same-sex marriage because opponents of same-sex marriage are often labeled  
"bigots" by same-sex marriage supporters. The desire to avoid being thought 
of  as a bigot may be leading some respondents to tell pollsters they support 
 same-sex marriage when they actually do not. 
"Political scientists also know that when asked about controversial issues, 
 some respondents will not give their actual opinion, but instead give the 
answer  they deem socially acceptable," New wrote. 
Are Some People Becoming Less Supportive of Same-Sex  Marriage? 
Regnerus pointed out a Rice University study that surveyed the same group 
of  people in 2006 and 2012. Asking the same people the same question over 
time is a  different way of measuring how individuals change their minds than 
looking at  trends over time with samples of a population. 
The study found that some did change their minds about same-sex marriage 
over  the six-year period, but not in the way one would expect from watching 
news  reports on the topic. 
Some who opposed same-sex marriage in 2006 did change their minds and  
supported it in 2012. There were even more, though, who supported same-sex  
marriage in 2006 and changed their minds in the opposite direction by 2012.  
Sixteen percent switched from opposed to supportive of same-sex marriage while  
28 percent switched from supportive to opposed to same sex marriage. 
Overall, the study found public opinion on same-sex marriage to be fairly  
stable, with Americans about evenly split, even though media reports suggest 
a  large swing in support of same-sex marriage over that period. 
Regnerus believes the Rice study may have slightly oversampled religious  
Americans and undersampled young adults, which would skew the results. But, 
the  study does suggest that pollsters are not picking up evidence of 
movement toward  greater support maintaining the traditional definition of  
marriage.


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