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Catholic Attitudes on Gay and Lesbian Issues
1. Catholic Attitudes on Gay and Lesbian Issues Key Findings from PRRI’s Recent Report Release Date: March 23, 2011
2. Sources of Data Public Religion Research Institute Surveys Pre-election American Values Survey, September 2010 Post-election American Values Survey, November 2010 Religion & Politics Tracking Survey, September, December 2010 PRRI/RNS Religion News Poll, October 2010 California Proposition 8 Survey, July 2010 Full Report can be found at: http://www.publicreligion.org/research/?id=509. 2 Catholic Attitudes on Gay and Lesbian Issues
3. Sources of Data Other Surveys National Election Pool, Exit Polls, 1982-2010. Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life, Religious Landscape Survey, 2007. Pew Research Center, Religion & Politics Survey, 2009. Pew Research Center, Post-election Survey, November 2010. Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research, Michigan Catholics Survey, 2010. 3 Catholic Attitudes on Gay and Lesbian Issues
4. National Sources of DataMethodology & Sample Sizes 4 Catholic Attitudes on Gay and Lesbian Issues
5. Social Acceptance of Gay and Lesbian Relationships 5 Catholic Attitudes on Gay and Lesbian Issues
6. Catholic Perceptions of Groups Facing Discrimination in Society 6 Catholic Attitudes on Gay and Lesbian Issues
7. Views on Selected Gay and Lesbian Issues 7 Catholic Attitudes on Gay and Lesbian Issues
8. Views on Same-sex Marriage & Civil Unions 8 Catholic Attitudes on Gay and Lesbian Issues
Give ranges, note much of the report based on PRRI’s AVS, which had over 650 Catholics in the sample.
Other non-CatholicChristians = 48% support (n=516).
GP ranks these groups in same order with exception that Muslims are slightly higher than Hispanics (58% vs. 52% respectively). GP on Gays & Lesbians = 64%.
Question wording:ADOPTION: "Allowing gay and lesbian couples to adopt children”ENDA: "Laws that would protect gay and lesbian people against job discrimination”DADT: "Allowing gays and lesbians to serve openly in the military"
Note: Less often includes a few times a month, seldom, and never categories.
While there are important divisions about the issue of marriage, there is less division over the issue of some kind of legal recognition for marriage. Only 3-in-10 of the most frequently attending Catholics say there should be no legal recognition of any kind for a gay couples’ relationship.This is perhaps not so surprising given the overwhelming support for social acceptance we saw in the first slide.
Compared to the general public and most other religious groups, Catholics are less likely to have negative moral evaluations of “homosexual behavior.” Among the general public, nearly half (49%) say that homosexual behavior is morally wrong, compared to about 1-in-10 (9%) who say it is morally acceptable. Roughly one-third (35%) say they do not consider it a moral issue. Less than 4-in-10 (39%) Catholics say homosexual behavior is morally wrong, compared to 12% who say it is morally acceptable. A plurality (41%) of Catholics say they do not consider homosexual behavior to be a moral issue (Pew Research Center, Religion & Politics Survey, 2009).