Survey: Most Americans Continue to Oppose Religious Service Refusals to LGBT People - Word&Way

Survey: Most Americans Continue to Oppose Religious Service Refusals to LGBT People

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White House with rainbow colors

The White House was lit with the colors of the rainbow on June 26, 2015, following the Supreme Court ruling on same-sex marriage. Photo courtesy of The White House/Pete Souza

(RNS) — A new survey finds that Americans continue to oppose the idea that small-business owners should be able to refuse products or services to gay or lesbian people due to their religious beliefs.

The survey by the Public Religion Research Institute follows up on findings released last week that show strong majorities within all religious groups also support nondiscrimination policies for LGBT Americans.

The findings, which are consistent with earlier opinion, suggest that last year’s U.S. Supreme Court decision in Masterpiece Cakeshop Ltd. v. Colorado Civil Rights Commission had little effect on notions about so-called service refusals. In that highly publicized case, the justices ruled that a Colorado baker had the right to refuse to bake a cake for a gay couple based on his personal religious objections.

PRRI’s latest release shows that about 57 percent of Americans opposed allowing small-business owners to refuse services to LGBT people if it would violate their religious beliefs, a modest but statistically insignificant decrease from 2016, when 61 percent said they opposed service refusals, and 2017, when 60 percent said they opposed them.

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“Opposition to Religiously Based Service Refusals of Gay and Lesbian People by State” Graphic courtesy of PRRI

“The support we’ve seen on these questions has been pretty stable,” said PRRI Senior Research Associate Maxine Najle. “The general public has been fairly supportive of LGBT issues for a while now. The differences are within the margin of error.”

As in the past, majorities of most major religious groups broadly oppose religiously based service refusals, including 54 percent of white mainline Protestants, 66 percent of black Protestants, 52 percent of Hispanic Protestants and 55 percent of white Catholics.

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“Most Religious Traditions Oppose Religiously Based Service Refusals of Gay and Lesbian People” Table courtesy of PRRI

White evangelicals and Mormons were the outliers — 55 percent of white evangelicals and 54 percent of Mormons favored service refusals to gays and lesbians if doing so violates a business owner’s religious beliefs.

Politically, the split was more distinct. Some 65 percent of conservative Republicans supported such refusals, compared with 44 percent of moderate Republicans and 35 percent of liberal Republicans. Democrats, by contrast, are united in their opposition to service refusals.

Younger Americans of all races were about 10 percentage points more likely than their older counterparts to oppose religiously based refusals. But PRRI pollsters noted that among white evangelicals, the differences in opposition to religiously based service refusals between younger and older generations were more modest (43 percent vs. 39 percent).

The survey also found regional differences. Not surprisingly, residents of the Northeast were more likely to oppose religiously based service refusals.

But in 10 states — Arkansas, Kansas, Alabama, Nevada, Oklahoma, Utah, Louisiana, Idaho, Tennessee and Alaska — slight majorities support religious vendors’ right to refuse service based on their beliefs.

Most major metropolitan areas oppose religiously based service refusals, with three exceptions: Nashville, Tenn.; Las Vegas; and Raleigh, N.C., where opposition was more muted.

The survey found a more dramatic uptick in views related to same-sex marriage. Sixty-two percent of Americans say gay and lesbian couples should be allowed to marry legally, a nearly 10-point increase from 2015, when 53 percent said they favored same-sex marriage. The Supreme Court ruled in 2015 that same-sex couples have a constitutional right to marry.

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Yonat Shimron is an RNS National Reporter and Senior Editor.