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Marriage Study: Equality Message Not Working


MARRIAGE VOTERS X390 (GETTY IMAGES) | ADVOCATE.COM

They believe that gay and lesbian relationships deserve legal recognition but fear that calling such unions “marriage” would tarnish the institution. They have close friends or family members who are gay, yet they are concerned about how same-sex marriage would affect their children.

And changing the way they think about marriage equality is crucial to future state initiative battles.

In a new study released Friday by Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research for the moderate-progressive think tank Third Way, researchers polled the elusive “middle” voter base — one that gay rights groups have failed to persuade at the ballot box with messages of fairness and equality. Greenberg Quinlan polled voters from two ballot initiatives with opposing outcomes in November: Question 1 in Maine, which stripped marriage rights from same-sex couples; and Referendum 71 in Washington, which expanded rights for domestic partners.

Of the “middle” group of voters — defined in the study as those who favored legal protections for gay relationships but opposed marriage rights — the “equality” argument alone fell on deaf ears. In the Maine poll only 22% of voters in the middle agreed that denying gay couples full marriage rights amounted to discrimination.

Lanae Erickson, senior policy counsel for Third Way, said future messaging has to directly address voters’ fears, in part by showing that committed gay couples are sincere in attempting to join, not redefine, the institution of marriage. “The takeaway is that we have to describe marriage in the way voters in the middle see it,” Erickson said. “It’s problematic when you talk solely about legal protections, because many straight people don’t see it that way. They see marriage as an ideal about commitment and responsibility. ... We need to show them that we want to take on the responsibility that marriage entails for the same reasons.”

Persuading voters in this group would have a profound impact on future campaigns, Erickson and colleagues asserted. Of the voters polled directly after Question 1 in Maine, 22% favored equal rights for gay couples sans the title “marriage,” while another 25% supported domestic partnerships or other types of legal recognition. “This is something we’ve been looking at for four years, and we think that we have a real value-add if we can help people understand how moderates see this debate,” Erickson said.

Erickson pointed to one ad Maine's Question 1 campaign that was representative of her group’s “equality plus” strategy: a Catholic grandmother who spoke about marriage while her son, his partner, and their child stood by her side. “Marriage, to me, is a great institution,” she said. “It works, and it’s what I want for my children too.”

Researchers also said that the response to anti-gay-marriage ads focusing on schools teaching about homosexuality has been  off-target. “Responding directly to the schools argument isn't necessarily enough,” the researchers concluded. "While it might deal with the literal concern raised by the ad, it does not address the underlying, deeper concern that people have about how their kids will be affected if society holds gay couples up as part of the ideal of marriage.”

Third Way’s report, “Moving the Middle on Marriage: Lessons From Maine and Washington,” is available here.

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Reader Comments
  • Name: Caleb
    Date posted: 2/6/2010 5:59:53 PM
    Hometown: Atlanta

    Comment:

    O-M-G...gay people: stop asking for instant equality. It won't happen! Stop asking for marriage and just accept the term "civil union." Rightfully so, Christian Americans do not want to just open up a traditionally single man-woman union to gay men and women; it's not appropriate given this strong Christian doctrine! Why do so many wish to participate in a tradition that has so actively sought to exclude them? Yes, I know that marriage has been trot upon for many years now by heterosexuals, and yes, logically it doesn't make sense to deny loving couples using the argument of "non-tradition." As contradictory as it may be, Americans simply aren't completely ready for this step. However, many Americans DO support legal equality. So why not take it? Full social equality will come but goodness gracious be patient!

  • Name: ludwig
    Date posted: 2/6/2010 4:20:57 PM
    Hometown: greenville,sc

    Comment:

    A rose is a rose is a rose that which we call a rose by any other name would smell so sweet. (Gertrude Stein (lesbian and spouse of Alice B. Toklas) and William Shakespeare (bi-?)). These folks who think that same sex marriage will damage marriage--are very fallacious in their thinking. Most heteros- I have talked to say that their marriages are just as strong as ever in States and Nations where same sex marriages are granted. These folks are like the ones who burned/murdered people at the stake for heresy and witchcraft---they murder and deprive others of their human rights imply because they are different from themselves. A marriage is a marriage no matter what you want to call it. The proper nomenclature for marriage same sex folks is not husband and wife---it is 'spouse' or 'life partner'. Husband is only appropriate if one of the spouses takes full care and nurses the other and in this meaning the phrase "Animal Husbandry" is brought to fore.

  • Name: David
    Date posted: 2/6/2010 1:37:25 PM
    Hometown: Washington DC

    Comment:

    First, Greenberg Quinlan is the polling firm retained by No on 8 and No on 1. In other words, they have a track record of failure. IMO, relying on them is like relying on Michael Brown for advice on hurricane relief. Second, why are they conducting a study like this NOW, 4 months after our defeat in ME? Studies of this type are more helpful, you know, before the election is over. Third, the study misses the glaringly obvious point, which our opponents understood from the beginning: People vote their self-interest. Frank Schubert said this understanding is why he won in CA. You can see him saying just that on Youtube. Thus, the other side argues that the voters' self-interest will be harmed if gay marriage passes and our side makes no case based on self-interest, but instead makes high-minded appeals to equality. The result is that we garner about 47-48% of the vote and they get 53%. Why is it so hard for our side to grasp what Schubert figured out 2 years ago?

  • Name: Don Charles
    Date posted: 2/6/2010 1:17:42 PM
    Hometown: Kansas City

    Comment:

    This study was spawned by a slave mentality that we've got to overcome if our equality movement is ever going to kick into high gear. I'm talking about the mentality that says Straight people must be convinced that we're worthy of equal rights; that says putting those rights up for public vote is a reasonable thing to do. They don't . . . and it isn't. We don't need to convince the "middle" of shit! The only thing they need to know is that we've had enough of being marginalized and disenfranchised, and we're hell-bent on changing the status quo. But before they know it, we've got to know it ourselves.

  • Name: Everett
    Date posted: 2/6/2010 11:24:03 AM
    Hometown: Amherst

    Comment:

    Jonathan, One reason gay relationships fail is that the culture doesn't support them. In fact, the society we live in opposes our relationships. Straight people in their adolescence are well supported (personally & culturally) in learning how to manage relationships, whereas for gay/lesbian kids there is zero support. We want marriage rights because WE WANT AMERICA TO HONOR OUR RELATIONSHIPS and routinely accord them the respect that straight unions receive. We want to be free to openly have boyfriends/girlfriends in high school just like straight people. We want images of same-sex relationships to be normal & routine in movies, television, everywhere. We have to win that kind of broad acceptance & support or our relationships will always be stressed out messy, & fragile, or nonexistent. We absolutely must have recognition that love between men or love between women is just as sacred, just as beautiful, just as important, and just as worthy, as love between heterosexuals.

  • Name: Mark
    Date posted: 2/6/2010 11:13:21 AM
    Hometown: Wappingers Falls

    Comment:

    Dah, you really thing so? Of course it isn't working. We've allowed the majority to vote on the rights of the minority. This violates the US Constitution. Every time a straight person marries we need to be there screaming with signs that we want the same civil right. We need to start a revolution as straight black men did, which brought them from slavery to the White House. Nobody will hand us our equal civil rights. People always enjoy being superior to others who they consider lesser. We need to take them.

  • Name: coralie broahurst
    Date posted: 2/6/2010 10:54:16 AM
    Hometown: sydney

    Comment:

    Thank you to all my wonderful gay friends for enriching my life!

  • Name: coralie broadhurst
    Date posted: 2/6/2010 10:37:38 AM
    Hometown: sydney

    Comment:

    Equality for all, irregardless of race, religion and sexual preference. Hoping to see this is my lifetime. Perhaps the only one achievable is 'gay rights', the others, at this time seem insurmountable! Hate, in all forms is, and always will be destructive!

  • Name: ChrisP
    Date posted: 2/6/2010 9:42:29 AM
    Hometown: London

    Comment:

    "They see marriage as an ideal about commitment and responsibility. ... We need to show them that we want to take on the responsibility that marriage entails for the same reasons.” This article is a good contrast to the one about open relationships where "Two new studies out of San Francisco show the majority of gay men thrive in open relationships. " "Middle" voters can sense the dishonesty in the shrill equality=marriage campaigns. They aren't necessarily homophobic and probably know enough real gay people to understand that "we are equal" does not mean "we are the same".

  • Name: Val
    Date posted: 2/6/2010 6:28:13 AM
    Hometown: London

    Comment:

    Jonathan, as one half of a 13-year-old ss couple, I can assure you that those who seek to marry are not the same people who move from one relationship to the next every few months. There is social pressure on straight couples to marry which isn't the case for same-sex couples. Those of us who marry have generally considered the issue in more depth than the average opposite sex couples who are socially pressured to take this step. This is why statistics show that globally same-sex marriages (and other registered unions) tend to last longer. I'm quite confident that fewer same-sex couples will seek to marry but more opposite same-sex marriages will continue to get divorced. (that is until there's equal pressure on same-sex couples to marry, at which point it will be the exact same thing. But for that we still have a god few years to wait. )

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