Author Topic: New poll says New Yorkers want gay marriage brought to vote  (Read 697 times)

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Offline ag337

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New poll says New Yorkers want gay marriage brought to vote

New poll says New Yorkers want gay marriage brought to vote, even if passage not a sure thingALBANY - Nearly eight of 10 New Yorkers say the state Senate should put a bill legalizing gay marriage up for a vote regardless of whether there's enough support to pass it, a new poll released Tuesday shows.

The Siena College poll shows that 78% of those surveyed disagree with Senate Majority Leader Malcolm Smith, who said he would only bring the bill to the floor only if he has the 32 votes needed to pass it.

Just 15% said the Senate should wait until the votes are there to pass it.

Overall, voters are split 46%-46% on the issue of whether gay marriage should be legalized. That's down from last month's 53-39 margain approval margin.

It is supported by a majority of Democrats, young, and Jewish voters and opposed by a majority of Republicans, older voters, blacks, and Protestant and Catholic voters.

Gov. Paterson Tuesday again called for the Senate to act.

The Assembly earlier this month passed the measure for a second time since 2007.

"If there's a 50-50 split in the polls, certainly it would seem the votes would be there to pass the legislation in the Legislature," Paterson said.

"What we're talking about is civil rights. What do you think the will of the people would have been about abolishing slavery?"

Meanwhile, with upstate billionaire Tom Golisano having said he is moving to Florida because of New York's high taxes, it appears there may be others willing to join him.

The poll showed that just 16% are committed to never leaving New York, while another 36% said they currently have no plans.

Another 10% said they will leave the Empire State "as quickly as I can," 11% suggest they will go unless they see improvement, and another 25% answered "maybe in retirement."

Paterson acknowledged the problem, saying more than 140,000 a year are moving to other states that offer lower property taxes, fewer mandates, lower income taxes, and better quality of life.

He said fewer people are leaving now because other states are having the same fiscal problems as New York.

The poll also shows that while Paterson's historically low poll numbers have not improved, they at least appear to have bottomed out.

Just 18% of those surveyed said Paterson is doing an excellent or good job as governor while a whopping 81% gave him a negative rating.

More than seven in 10 said they would vote for someone else for governor in 2010.

Paterson would be trounced in a hypothetical Democratic matchup (70-19%) against Attorney General Andrew Cuomo and a gubernatorial matchup against Rudy Giuliani (59-31%).

In fact, Paterson actually trails by a point against John Faso, the last GOP gubernatorial candidate.

Nearly two-thirds believe Cuomo will run for governor next year and 47% believe he should, compared to a third who believe he should seek reelection as attorney general.


Read more: "New poll says New Yorkers want gay marriage brought to vote, even if passage not a sure thing" - http://www.nydailynews.com/news/2009/05 ... GfxzbGLh&A

Offline briann

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Re: New poll says New Yorkers want gay marriage brought to vote
« Reply #1 on: May 27, 2009, 11:17:19 AM »
Quote
It is supported by a majority of Democrats, young, and Jewish voters and opposed by a majority of Republicans, older voters, blacks, and Protestant and Catholic voters.

WHAT????  This is complete B.S.  Once again.  they are polling secular Jews... and counting them as Jewish... and when they poll Catholics/Protestants... they only count them if they are NOT secular....

This warps the findings so that people assume Jews are leftists.



Offline muman613

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Re: New poll says New Yorkers want gay marriage brought to vote
« Reply #2 on: May 27, 2009, 11:23:36 AM »
Quote
It is supported by a majority of Democrats, young, and Jewish voters and opposed by a majority of Republicans, older voters, blacks, and Protestant and Catholic voters.

WHAT????  This is complete B.S.  Once again.  they are polling secular Jews... and counting them as Jewish... and when they poll Catholics/Protestants... they only count them if they are NOT secular....

This warps the findings so that people assume Jews are leftists.




Most of the Orthodox Jews, including myself, are on the Right while most of the Progressive/Reform Jews are very far to the left. This is a very sad fact which causes me a lot of tears.

You shall make yourself the Festival of Sukkoth for seven days, when you gather in [the produce] from your threshing floor and your vat.And you shall rejoice in your Festival-you, and your son, and your daughter, and your manservant, and your maidservant, and the Levite, and the stranger, and the orphan, and the widow, who are within your cities
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Offline Rubystars

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Re: New poll says New Yorkers want gay marriage brought to vote
« Reply #3 on: May 27, 2009, 11:25:05 AM »
A secular Jew can be Jewish by halacha but what is a secular Christian? To be a Christian I think someone has to believe in the core doctrines.

Online cjd

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Re: New poll says New Yorkers want gay marriage brought to vote
« Reply #4 on: May 27, 2009, 07:41:59 PM »
This is not something that is supported in any big way by the mainstream population here in New York. It's a media blip that is being pushed by liberal groups and a sick media. The liberal Jews that they are polling are just to politically correct to say they are against it. I don't think any one religious group is for this more than the other secular or otherwise. It will never make a vote and if it does it will not pass. I see it as a non issue.
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