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Reuters
09 July, 2015, 08:48
Update: 09 July, 2015, 08:48
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Over 60pc of Republicans oppose court on gay marriage

Reuters
09 July, 2015, 08:48
Update: 09 July, 2015, 08:48
A Gay Pride flag flies below the US flag during a celebration of the US Supreme Court’s ruling of legalizing gay marriage nationwide, at a rally in Ann Arbor, Michigan, on 26 June 2015. Photo: Reuters

New York: Almost two-thirds of Republicans oppose the Supreme Court’s backing of gay marriage, according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll, which gives hope for conservative presidential candidates who have come out strongly against marriage equality.

Republicans would struggle to make opposition to same-sex marriage a winning issue in next November’s general election because more than half of Americans support it, according to the online survey.

But there is still a clear majority of Republicans - 63 per cent - who think the court’s historic decision last month to legalize gay marriage nationwide was wrong.

That could give a boost to gay marriage opponents like Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker, Senator Ted Cruz of Texas and former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee in the fight for the Republican nomination.

Walker, whose is widely expected to declare his candidacy next week, described the Supreme Court ruling as a ‘grave mistake,’ and has called for a constitutional amendment to allow states to decide whether to allow gay marriage.

Forty-two percent of Republicans in the poll said same-sex marriage laws should be made at the state level by referendum, a view taken by only 24 per cent of the overall population.

Cruz has vowed to put his opposition to gay-marriage ‘front and center’ of his campaign and has urged some states to ignore the court ruling. Huckabee has long been a vocal opponent of gay rights.

Their positions might appeal to the kind of older, conservative Republican who turns out to vote in the Iowa caucuses, the first nominating contest in the 2016 White House race, said University of Northern Iowa political science professor Christopher Larimer.

‘Part of it’s a generational thing,’ Larimer said.

Other leading Republican candidates like former Florida Governor Jeb Bush and Senator Marco Rubio of Florida have voiced support for traditional marriage but shied away from strong criticism of the Supreme Court.

When asked in general whether they support allowing same-sex couples to marry, 51 per cent of Americans say they do, while 35 per cent oppose it. Forty-eight percent of independent voters back gay marriage, making it difficult for a conservative Republican to win general election votes on the issue.

The poll was conducted between 26 June and 8 July among 3,632 people.

Reuters/Ipsos online polls are measured with a credibility interval. Among all respondents, the gay marriage poll had an overall credibility interval of plus or minus 1.9 percentage points, and plus or minus 3.3 per cent for Republican respondents.

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