A solid majority of Americans oppose discrimination against gays and lesbians, even if it is based on religious beliefs.…
A Reuters Poll conducted from April 6-8, 2015 and
released on Thursday, finds that a solid majority of Americans oppose
discrimination against gays and lesbians, even if it is based on
religious beliefs. By nearly a 2 to 1 margin, Americans do not think religious conviction should be a justification for discrimination.
The Reuters poll
found that by a 55-27 percent margin, Americans do not believe
businesses should have the right to refuse to hire certain groups of
people based on their religious beliefs. By a very similar 54-28 margin,
Americans do not support the right of businesses to refuse services to
certain categories of people based on religious objections. In plain
English, Americans do not approve of discrimination even if it is
disguised by the euphemism “religious freedom”.
Furthermore, the Reuters poll
found that Americans now strongly approve of allowing same-sex couples
to marry, with 52 percent in favor to just 32 percent against. 37 states
currently permit same-sex marriages, but that number is likely to
continue to increase as the tide continues to roll over the reactionary
forces of bigotry, one state at a time. 55 percent of the respondents to the Reuters poll
believe states that do not recognize same-sex marriages still should be
required to honor legal marriages performed in other states.
Defenders of so-called religious freedom laws often
try to portray supporters of LGBT equality as radical activists
persecuting Christians. In Republican circles, equality advocates are
derided as being out of touch with American values. However, the
cultural reactionaries who support discrimination against gays and
lesbians are actually the ones who are out of touch with contemporary
American values.
The Republican Party can continue to defend the
indefensible, but anti-gay bigotry is no longer a winning issue for them
in the United States. Perhaps ambitious Republican politicians are slow
to recognize the shifting political landscape under their feet. They
are still stuck in the politics of a decade ago, when Karl Rove and
other Republican strategists used anti-gay ballot measures as a way to
get throngs of Republican voters to the polls. The strategy worked
pretty well in 2004, when most Americans were opposed to gay marriage
(62-30 percent against, according to a Wall Street Journal/NBC News Poll in 2004), but it no longer pays dividends for the GOP.
Republicans
can continue to pretend that they speak for most Americans when they
defend “Bible-based” bigotry. However, the reality is that on LGBT
rights, Republicans don’t speak for most Americans. The Republican
Party’s views are antiquated. Americans believe in non-discrimination,
not the right to discriminate based on religious beliefs.
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