America’s move to the left on social issues
continues as a new Gallup poll has found that for the first time in
seven years more Americans identify themselves as pro-choice than
pro-life.
A new Gallup poll found that:
Half of Americans consider themselves “pro-choice” on abortion, surpassing the 44% who identify as “pro-life.” This is the first time since 2008 that the pro-choice position has had a statistically significant lead in Americans’ abortion views.…..For most of the past five years, Americans have been fairly evenly divided in their association with the two abortion labels. The only exception between 2010 and 2014 was in May 2012, when the pro-life position led by 50% to 41%.Prior to 2009, the pro-choice side almost always predominated, including in the mid-1990s by a substantial margin. While support for the pro-choice position has yet to return to the 53% to 56% level seen at the time, the trend has been moving in that direction since the 2012 reading.
The Koch fueled Republican takeover of state level
offices has led to a surge in anti-choice legislation, but Republicans
are out step with the direction of a majority of the country. At the
federal level, when Congressional Republicans pass bills that take away
the right to choose, they are appealing to a shrinking constituency of
supporters.
Socially, the United States is moving to the left.
Majorities in the country support immigration reform, same-sex marriage,
a woman’s right to choose, and accept climate change as reality. On all
of these issues, Republicans are in the minority.
The social movement to the left was also found in last week’s Gallup poll that revealed that social liberals outnumber social wingnuts.
This hasn’t translated to success for Democrats in midterm elections
because many millennials who share similar beliefs as Democrats don’t
vote.
A recent poll by Toluna Quicksurveys
found that Millennials support Democrats by a margin of 41%-21%, and
91% plan on voting in the 2016 election. The problem for Democrats is
that 30% also said that they vote in presidential elections, but not in
state and local elections.
Most Americans are pro-choice, but a sizable number
of these individuals aren’t voting in the elections that determine the
policy direction of many states on social issues. If pro-choice
Americans don’t vote, their states elect governors and legislators that
carry out an anti-choice agenda.
What this dynamic means for 2016 is that the
Republican presidential candidates will be trying to win an anti-choice
primary in order to run in a general election when the majority of
voters are likely to be pro-choice.
The U.S. has shifted left on social issues, but for
that shift to reflected in policy, voters must vote in non-presidential
year elections.
Republicans can’t stop it. America is remembering it has always been a liberal nation.
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