More than 80 per cent, after undecideds excluded, would vote Yes in referendum
Support for the introduction of same-sex marriage is rising steadily, with a majority supporting the move, the latest Irish Times/Ipsos MRBI poll has found.
Asked
how they would vote in the planned referendum on the issue, 71 per cent
said they would vote in favour, 17 per cent that they would vote No, 9
per cent had no opinion and 3 per cent refused to respond.
When
undecided voters or those who refused to respond are excluded, the Yes
figure rises to 81 per cent with 19 per cent on the No side.
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That shows an increase since the
last poll in October, when the figure, excluding undecided voters and
those who refused to answer, was 76 per cent for Yes to 24 per cent for
No. Back in November 2012, the margin was still closer, with 64 per cent
Yes and 36 per cent No. The referendum is to be held next April or May.
In party terms, Labour
voters are the most strongly in support of the move, with 80 per cent
saying they will vote Yes, just 9 per cent No and 11 per cent undecided
or refusing to respond. Support among Sinn Féin voters is almost as
strong, but supporters of Independents and smaller parties, as well as Fine Gael voters, are a little less enthusiastic.
Fianna Fáil
voters are the least supportive of the move, with 60 per cent saying
they will vote Yes, 26 per cent No and 14 per cent undecided.
In
class terms there is almost equal support for same-sex marriage across
the spectrum, with middle class voters marginally more in favour than
working class voters.
However, farmers are
significantly less enthusiastic, with 46 per cent in favour, 33 per cent
against and 21 per cent undecided.
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