Tuesday, August 1, 2017

Same-sex marriage: ‘Profound shift’ in Australian views

A survey finds considerable support for same-sex marriage, amid renewed debate over making it legal.

Australians have considerably increased their support for same-sex marriage in the last decade, a report has found.

The wide-ranging survey found that 67% of women and 59% of men want to see same-sex marriage made legal in Australia.

In 2005, it was 43% of women and 32% of men, according to the annual survey of the same 17,000 people.

Report author Prof Roger Wilkins said it revealed a “very profound shift” in attitudes in the country.

“It is quite clear that community sentiment has shifted in favour of marriage equality,” he told the Australian Broadcasting Corp.

Debate over legalising same-sex marriage has intensified in Australia this week amid speculation that a government MP may soon introduce a bill to parliament.

However, Australia’s ruling conservative Coalition is split on the issue, and any push to legalise same-sex marriage is likely to encounter opposition.

More progressive attitudes

The Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia report is a wide-ranging annual survey commissioned by the government and run by the University of Melbourne.

On attitudes to marriage and children, it measured data between 2005 and 2015 and found most attitudes had become more progressive.

Source: Same-sex marriage: ‘Profound shift’ in Australian views – BBC News


No comments:

Post a Comment