Poll Shows Majority Opposition to Obama’s Transgender,
Gender Identity, Plan
A new poll by
Rasmussen shows that most adults, and most parents of school-aged
children, oppose Obama’s transgender-boosting K-12 bathroom and locker room
policy.
In the telephone poll of 1,000 adults, announced May
17, 51 percent of all adult respondents rejected Obama’s policy decree while only 33 percent were
accepting of the plan, and 16 percent were undecided.
Rasmussen poll shows even stronger opposition among parents of some of the
55 million K-12 kids in 100,000 schools that must open their single-sex
bathrooms and locker rooms to youths who merely claim to feel like members of the other sex.
Video: White House to issue "guidance" on transgender bathrooms
Among Americans with elementary and secondary school age children, those
most directly impacted by the Obama administration’s latest order, 55% are
opposed. Thirty-two percent (32%) favor allowing transgender students to
use the bathrooms of the opposite biological sex, while 13% are not sure.
This poll helps show how transgender people get high public sympathy in
polls that ask generic questions — and also get lopsided strong opposition on
specific issues, such as the entry of transgender people into opposite-sex bathrooms.
For example, Rasmussen has found strong support for policies that
would help transgenders. A 2014 poll showed that 46% of American Adults favor a law that bans discrimination based on
gender identity when it comes to employment, housing and public accommodations
in their state. Thirty-four percent (34%) oppose such a law, but another 21%
are undecided.
The specific-to-general trend is highlighted by a 2015 poll taken from
April 2015 to January 2016 year by the Public Religion Research Institute
(PRRI) finds a large number of Americans are in favor of LGBT non
discrimination laws. In fact, 71 percent said they favor laws that
“would protect gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender people against
discrimination in jobs, public accommodations, and housing.”
The PRRI did not ask about bathrooms, children, K-12 schools, locker rooms
or any of the hot-button issues that are being forced to the surface by Obama’s
support for the claim that a person’s feeling of “gender identity” deserves the
same legal protection in included in sex-discrimination laws.
A CNN poll released last week found very
different results when the questions put before respondents were a bit more
specific.
The CNN poll asked respondents if they favor generic “laws that guarantee
equal protection for transgender people,” and 75 percent said they favored such
laws.
However, when the question was changed to the specific issue of allowing
transgender individuals to use facilities that correspond to their biological
sex rather than their feeling of “gender identity,” the results were far more
mixed. Faced with the specific, only 57 percent — not 75 percent — opposed a
law that would require transgender people to use a bathroom that corresponds to
their birth sex.
In fact, CNN’s poll showed that 40 percent supported the bathroom law –
which means that at least 15 percent of CNN’s respondents said they support
“guarantee[d] equal protection” in principle, but oppose it when normal
people’s sexual-privacy is threatened by allowing people who claim to be
transgender into former single-sex bathrooms. Other factors have a huge impact on poll results.
One problem with the Rasmussen statement on the May 17 poll is that it does
not reveal information about the strength of respondents’ opinions. That’s
important because politicians react to people with strong opinions about an
issue, and they ignore people with weak opinions.
A poll in North Carolina did reveal, however that people with strong views
on the subject were lopsidedly against transgenders using the wrong single-sex
bathrooms. In early April, SurveyUSA did a poll for WRAL-TV in Raleigh, which
asked this question;
House Bill 2 states that people must use the restroom matching the gender
listed on their birth certificate and not the gender with which they identify.
This can be an issue for transgender individuals. How do you feel about the new
law requiring people to follow their birth certificate in using a restroom? Do
you strongly agree? Somewhat agree? Neither agree nor disagree? Somewhat
disagree? Or strongly disagree?
The poll question is somewhat tilted because it does not tell respondents
that transgender people can change their birth-certificates after they undergo
surgery, but the result showed that 56 percent of people agreed with the law
and 34 percent disagreed.
More importantly, the poll showed that 46 percent of people strongly
agreed, while only 25 percent strongly disagreed. That’s almost 2:1 strong
support for the North Carolina law. Also, questions that indirectly seek answers also reveal the sincerity and
depth of people’s stated support for a policy. For example, the May 17
Rasmussen poll showed that many of the people who told Rasmussen that they
agreed with Obama’s policy also used the idea of federalism to indirectly
oppose his one-size-fits-all-K-12-bathrooms policy.
Just 24% believe the federal government should be responsible for setting
bathroom policies in elementary and secondary schools. Just as many (25%) say that’s
the responsibility of state government, while another 41% think local
government should decide what school bathroom policies are.
[Only] Fifty-one percent (51%) of voters who favor the new [Obama]
policy believe the federal government should be responsible for setting school
bathroom policies. The federalism answer suggests that far less than 33 percent of the
pro-Obama respondents in the Rasmussen poll privately and strongly agreed with
Obama’s plan.
Timing can also impact the poll results. For example, a Reuters
five-day rolling poll found on May 3 a close split on the transgender bathroom
question, with the larger number coming down against the progressives’ plan of
allowing men who imagine themselves to be women to use a woman’s restroom.
On May 3, the rolling poll of 557 respondents found 42.1 percent agreeing
that “People should use public restrooms according to their biological sex”
while 40.8 percent said people should use bathrooms matching “the gender with
which they identify.” A further 17 percent did not have an opinion.
But Reuters ended the poll at a point where support for Obama’s position was at an unusual high. Over the five-week period when the rolling poll was being
conducted, 44.3 percent said biological sex should guide the decision
while 39.8 percent say the sex that people “identify with” should be taken into
account. The poll did not reveal the strength of people’s opinions. Clearly the
results can differ wildly depending on how the questions are posed.
http://www.breitbart.com/2016-presidential-race/2016/05/17/transgender-polls-mixed-specific-general/
No comments:
Post a Comment