Support for abortion rights grows as some
U.S. states curb access: Reuters/Ipsos poll
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[May 28, 2019]
By Maria Caspani
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Americans have become
more supportive of abortion rights over the past year, even as a wave of
Republican-controlled state governments have imposed new restrictions,
according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll released on Sunday.
The poll found that 58% of American adults said abortion should be legal
in most or all cases, up from 50% who said that in a similar poll that
ran in July 2018.
While support broke down along partisan lines, passions were higher
among registered Democrats, with 81% saying abortion should be legal in
most or all cases, while 55% of registered Republicans said it should be
illegal in most or all cases.
This year, eight Republican-led states have passed new restrictions on
abortion, measures that activists said are aimed at provoking the U.S.
Supreme Court to reconsider the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision that
established a woman's right to terminate her pregnancy.
Anti-abortion campaigners are counting on the new 5-4 conservative
majority on the court, following two appointments by Republican
President Donald Trump, to turn the balance in their favor.
A wide majority of Americans disagree with parts of the year's most
sweeping anti-abortion measure: Alabama's law banning abortion in all
cases, including for pregnancies resulting from rape or incest, with
only a narrow exception for women whose lives are danger.
Eighty percent of respondents told Reuters/Ipsos they support abortion
in cases of rape or incest.
Other states, including Ohio and Georgia, have banned abortions absent a
medical emergency after six weeks of pregnancy or after the fetal
heartbeat can be detected, which can occur before a woman realizes she
is pregnant.
Public opinion is almost evenly split on whether abortion should be
legal after a heartbeat is detected, the poll showed.
The Reuters/Ipsos poll also found that 85% of Americans are in favor of
abortion when the mother's life is in danger and 59% said abortion
should be legal when there is evidence that the baby is physically or
mentally impaired.
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Hundreds of women protest on the steps of the Old Courthouse during
a Stop the Abortion Ban Bill Day of Action in St. Louis, Missouri,
U.S., May 21, 2019. REUTERS/Lawrence Bryant
Fifty-eight percent of U.S. adults said abortion should not be legal
when the fetus is older than 20 weeks, while 30% said it should be
allowed.
"I think abortion is a very difficult, horrible thing, but I don't
think the government has any say in whether you should be able to do
it - that's a very personal thing," said poll respondent Steven
Hoelke, 69, a Republican retired aerospace engineer from Claremont,
California. "It's tough and I don't think it can be dictated from
above."
2020 RALLYING CRY?
Trump's opposition to abortion has stirred support in his base,
especially among many religious voters. The two dozen Democrats
vying to challenge him have loudly supported abortion rights.
But the poll also found most voters were not looking for candidates
whose primary focus is abortion: Just 9% of registered Republicans
said they would prefer to vote for a candidate whose main focus is
banning abortion, while 11% of registered Democrats preferred one
whose primary focus would be protecting abortion rights.
U.S. voters usually list healthcare and the economy as the top
issues going into an election.
The Reuters/Ipsos poll was conducted online in English throughout
the United States on May 22-23. It gathered responses from 1,008
people and has a credibility interval, a measure of precision, of 6
percentage points.
(Reporting by Maria Caspani; editing by Scott Malone and David
Gregorio)
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