Majority
of Republicans would attend a loved one's gay wedding: Reuters/Ipsos
poll
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[April 29, 2015]
By Jeff Mason
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A majority of U.S.
Republicans would attend the same-sex wedding of a loved one, a
Reuters/Ipsos poll showed on Wednesday, highlighting the political risks
for Republican presidential candidates who stake out positions against
gay marriage.
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Though some Republican White House hopefuls have tried to insert
nuance into their positions on gay marriage - something that polling
shows most Americans back - their opposition is clear.
Adamant opposition is popular with the party's conservative wing,
whose support is critical in the presidential nominating process.
The question of whether or not a candidate would attend the gay
wedding of a loved one has become an increasingly common litmus test
for candidates on the issue.
Former Florida Governor Jeb Bush said on Tuesday he would attend the
same-sex wedding of someone he cared about. U.S. Senator Marco
Rubio, also from Florida, told an interviewer he would do the same,
though he opposes gay marriage.
Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker said he has been to a gay wedding
reception but defines marriage as between a man and a woman. Senator
Ted Cruz of Texas, known for his appeal to the party's right-leaning
Tea Party wing, has said he has not.
A Reuters/Ipsos poll showed most Republicans across the country
would show up for same-sex nuptials.
The poll showed 56 percent of Republicans would attend the gay
wedding of a loved one if invited. That compares with 80 percent of
Democrats and 70 percent of independents, who said they would go.
Overall, 68 percent of Americans would attend, the poll showed,
while 19 percent would not and 13 percent were unsure.
The poll's results suggests Republicans who stake out strong
opposition to gay marriage could be on shaky political ground if
their ultimate goal is to win the White House.
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Though a right-leaning, anti-marriage position may appeal to
important conservative voters in states with early nominating
contests such as Iowa and New Hampshire, that stand could hurt an
eventual nominee in the general election, in which cross-party
appeal and independents play a larger role.
The poll comes as the Supreme Court deliberates a legal challenge to
laws prohibiting same-sex unions. Justices appeared sharply divided
on Tuesday on whether the U.S. Constitution guarantees a right to
same-sex marriage.
The online poll was conducted between April 23-27 and included 1,752
adults aged 18 and older, among them 751 Democrats, 567 Republicans
and 248 independents.
The Reuters/Ipsos poll is measured with a credibility interval. It
has a credibility interval of plus or minus 2.7 percentage points
for all adults, 4.7 percentage points for Republicans, 4.1
percentage points for Democrats, and 7.1 percentage points for
independents.
(Additional reporting by Steve Holland; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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