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Survey: Less than 25% in any U.S. state approves total abortion ban

By Adelle M. Banks, Religion News Service
Abortion rights activists wave signs on the Wilshire overpass overlooking the 110 freeway at a Stop Abortion Bans rally organized by NARAL Pro-Choice California in Los Angeles on May 21. File Photo by Chris Chew/UPI
Abortion rights activists wave signs on the Wilshire overpass overlooking the 110 freeway at a Stop Abortion Bans rally organized by NARAL Pro-Choice California in Los Angeles on May 21. File Photo by Chris Chew/UPI | License Photo

Aug. 13 (UPI) -- In no state in the United States does even one-quarter of the population say abortion should be illegal in all cases, a new survey shows.

The report, released Tuesday by the Public Religion Research Institute, shows that in five states, at least 20 percent of the population believes abortion should be legal in all cases: Louisiana (23 percent), Mississippi (22 percent), Arkansas (21 percent), Tennessee (21 percent), Nebraska (21 percent), North Dakota (20 percent) and Kentucky (20 percent).

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But even in Alabama and Missouri, where laws have recently been passed to make abortion illegal with practically no exceptions, fewer than a fifth of the population says abortion should be illegal all the time. In Alabama just 16 percent opposes abortion at all times, while 19 percent of Missourians hold that position. The anti-abortion laws are facing court challenges in both states.

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"These results demonstrate that the Republican-controlled legislatures who have passed state laws that amount to a virtual ban on abortion are out of touch not just with Americans overall but with residents of their own states and members of their own party," PRRI CEO and founder Robert P. Jones said in announcing the survey results. "Few Americans, even in the most conservative states in the country, believe that abortion should be banned outright."

These state-by-state findings come at a time when national views on abortion have remained stable. In 2018, 15 percent of those surveyed said it should be illegal in all cases, according to PRRI, compared to 16 percent in 2014.

The study's researchers found that more than three-quarters of Americans surveyed said their opinion about abortion had remained unchanged over the last five years.

Hispanic Protestants (21 percent) and Hispanic Catholics (16 percent) were the two religious groups that most reported having become "more opposed" to abortion. Buddhist (18 percent) and New Age adherents (18 percent) were among those that most reported becoming "more supportive."

Members of conservative religious groups were more likely to favor making abortion illegal in all or most cases, including white evangelical Protestants (65 percent); Jehovah's Witnesses (68 percent); Mormons (66 percent); and Hispanic Protestants (58 percent).

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But a majority of other Protestant groups, including white mainline Protestants (59 percent) and black Protestants (56 percent), say abortion should be legal in all or most cases.

Catholics are almost equally divided, with 4 in 10 against making abortion legal in all or most cases and a similar percentage against illegality in all or most instances.

But when race and ethnicity are considered, there are more striking differences of opinion among Catholics.

For example, a slim majority of white Catholics (52 percent) supports the legality of abortion, while only 41 percent of Hispanic Catholics do.

Among Hispanic Protestants, 63 percent who identify as evangelical oppose legal abortion, compared to 43 percent of their non-evangelical counterparts. And among African American Protestants, 51 percent of those who identify as evangelical generally support legal abortion compared to 67 percent of black non-evangelicals.

One-fifth (21 percent) of Americans say a political candidate's abortion view is a "deal-breaker," with a higher percentage of those opposing legal abortion (27 percent) saying only a candidate who shares their view would get their vote. Eighteen percent of those supporting legal abortion consider it a deal-breaking issue.

Hispanic Protestants, white evangelical Protestants and Jewish Americans were the religious groups with the highest proportion -- at just under 3 in 10 -- who say they would only vote for a candidate who shares their abortion view.

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The survey questioned 40,292 respondents between March 14 and Dec. 16, and had an overall margin of error of plus or minus 0.5 percentage points. The margin of error for respondents of different religious affiliation varied with sample sizes. It was plus or minus 1.2 percentage points for white evangelical and white mainline Protestants and plus or minus 7 percentage points for followers of New Age religion.

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