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The Pulse Abortion: survey of voters By RICHARD DAY ![]() Abortion has become a visible and controversial issue in Illinois. In October, Richard Day Research conducted interviews with over 3,800 registered voters in 19 legislative districts in Illinois on behalf of Planned Parenthood. The most decisive finding was that Illinois voters preferred that the decision of whether to have an abortion should be left to a woman and her doctor, and not to government. If one averaged the results from the 19 districts, 81 percent said a woman and her doctor should make the decision, compared to 10 percent who believed that government should make it.
These 19 surveyed districts were representative of all portions of the state: Three districts were in Chicago, two in suburban Cook County, four in the suburban collar counties and 10 downstate. The districts were selected by Planned Parenthood based on incumbents it considered to be fence-sitters on the issue (see "Districts" box). Each respondent was asked five questions about abortion. (The exact wording for each is shown in the "Questions" box; the results, which are averages of the responses of the 19 districts, are shown in the "Answers" box. The margin of error for all 3,800 interviewed is plus or minus 2 percent.) When asked about the U.S. Supreme Court's 1973 Roe v. Wade decision and its 1989 Webster decision, an average of 66 percent of respondents said they preferred the 1973 decision, which allowed women the right to choose, and an average of 28 percent preferred the 1989 decision, which allowed individual states to place restrictions on abortion. When asked how they would vote if they had an opportunity on a statewide ballot to choose between keeping abortion legal and making it illegal, respondents were not offered any "middle ground." Those who were initially unsure or who said "legal sometimes" were asked again to choose between the two options. On average, 65 percent said they would vote to keep abortion legal in the state, compared to 30 percent who said they would vote to make it illegal. We also asked how the abortion issue would affect the respondents' voting for candidates. We offered a choice between two hypothetical candidates who agreed with the respondent on most of the issues he or she cared about. The candidates differed only on their abortion stands one was in favor of keeping abortion legal, and one was in favor of making it illegal. Presented with this scenario, on average, 53; percent chose the pro-choice candidate, compared to 29 percent who chose the
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pro-life candidate. In none of the 19 districts did a majority choose the pro-life candidate. The most divisive result in the survey was on the question of whether abortions should be covered by government health insurance. In six of the 19 districts, a majority supported Medicaid coverage for abortion; in eight of the 19 a majority opposed that coverage. On average, 44 percent supported Medicaid coverage and 46 percent opposed it. Analyzing the differences among the 19 districts, we found that districts with a higher proportion of younger, educated and high-income voters (primarily the suburban Cook County, collar county and "college town" districts) were the most likely to be pro-choice. Those districts with higher proportions of elderly, lower income and less educated respondents (primarily the downstate districts) were less likely to be pro-choice. However, a majority supported the legality of abortion in all but one district. The predominate theme that emerges from this survey is that abortion is a highly personal issue that should not be left in government hands.□ Richard Day has his own survey research firm, Richard Day Research, in Evanston. He holds a Ph.D. from the University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana. December 1989 | Illinois Issues | 31 |
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