Pubdate: Sat, 15 Feb 2014
Source: Chattanooga Times Free Press (TN)
Copyright: 2014 Chattanooga Publishing Company, Inc.
Contact:  http://www.timesfreepress.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/992
Note: Paper does not publish LTE's outside its circulation area

RESIDENTS OPEN TO MEDICAL POT, POLL SHOWS

MURFREESBORO, Tenn. - Tennesseans oppose legalizing marijuana 
generally but appear willing to allow medical marijuana use, 
according to a poll by MTSU. The poll also found:

Sixty-four percent of state residents oppose allowing gay couples to 
marry legally.

Fifty-two percent support forbidding the enforcement in Tennessee of 
federal firearms laws and leaving firearms regulated by state and local laws.

Additionally, the poll measured attitudes toward abortion, further 
restricting access to pseudoephedrine, allowing grocery stores to 
sell wine and repealing the new federal health care law, according to 
an MTSU news release.

Conducted Jan. 23-26, the scientifically valid poll of 600 randomly 
selected Tennessee adults has an error margin of plus or minus 4 
percentage points at the 95 percent level of confidence.

MARIJUANA USE BREAKDOWN

"The poll underscores the importance of distinguishing between 
support for permitting general marijuana use and support for 
permitting medical marijuana use," Ken Blake, director of the poll at 
Middle Tennessee State University, said in the news release.

"When we simply asked Tennesseans whether they thought the use of 
marijuana should be made legal, or not, 33 percent said it should be 
made legal, 57 percent said it should remain banned, and the rest 
weren't sure," he said.

"But then we followed up by asking that same 57 percent whether 
adults should be allowed to use doctor-prescribed marijuana for 
medical purposes. Nearly two-thirds of them said yes.

"When you sort everyone out, you end up with 33 percent saying 
marijuana use should be allowed in general, 36 percent saying 
marijuana use should be allowed only for medical purposes, and 18 
percent saying marijuana use should remain entirely banned, even for 
medical purposes. Another 6 percent are undecided about a general ban 
but would permit medical use, and the rest say they aren't sure."

Attitudes toward marijuana legalization break sharpest along 
religious lines, with a 40 percent plurality of self-described 
evangelical Christians supporting a ban on all except medical uses 
and a 48 percent plurality of non-evangelicals favoring legalization 
of marijuana use in general, the news release stated.

Divisions along party lines are less pronounced, but still 
significant, with a 45 percent plurality of Democrats favoring 
general legalization, a 44 percent plurality of Republicans 
supporting a ban on all but medical uses, and independents splitting 
nearly evenly between general legalization and allowing only medical 
uses. About a quarter or fewer in each party favor a total ban.

"It's hard to say whether proponents of allowing general marijuana 
use and proponents of allowing only medical marijuana use would be 
willing to join forces politically," Blake said in the release. "But 
one thing is clear: Proponents of continuing the absolute ban on 
marijuana use are substantially outnumbered in Tennessee."

SAME-SEX MARRIAGE OPPOSITION

Meanwhile, 64 percent of Tennesseans oppose "allowing gay and lesbian 
couples to marry legally," a level statistically the same as the 62 
percent opposition seen in the spring 2013 MTSU poll. Only 26 percent 
favor allowing gay and lesbian couples to marry, and the rest aren't sure.

Here again, religion makes the biggest difference, with 77 percent of 
evangelical Christians opposed and 16 percent in favor compared to 36 
percent opposed and 51 percent in favor among nonevangelicals, 
according to the news release.

Fully 68 percent of Tennesseans in the current poll identify 
themselves as evangelical Christians, while 26 percent do not, and 
the rest don't know.

MOST OPPOSE FEDERAL GUN LAWS

A 52 percent majority of state residents favor "forbidding the 
enforcement of any federal-level firearm laws in Tennessee, leaving 
firearms regulated solely by state and local laws," the poll found. 
Thirty-two percent oppose the idea, and 3 percent volunteered that 
they would like to do away with all gun laws. Thirteen percent didn't 
know or gave no answer.

Support for the idea has the most traction in the non-Nashville areas 
of Middle Tennessee, where 64 percent of residents express support 
compared to about 47 percent elsewhere in the state, including 
Nashville. State Senate and House representatives whose districts are 
in Middle Tennessee have proposed legislation that would make it 
illegal to enforce federal gun laws in the state. OTHER FINDINGS

Abortion. Fifty-one percent of Tennesseans think abortion should be 
"legal only under certain circumstances." Another 12 percent think it 
should be "legal under any circumstances," and 32 percent think it 
should be "illegal in all circumstances."

Pseudoephedrine. A 64 percent majority favors "requiring that 
Tennesseans get a doctor's prescription before buying more than about 
10 days' worth of allergy or cold medicines that contain 
pseudoephedrine, which can be used to make the illegal drug 
methamphetamine." Twenty-seven percent are opposed, and the rest aren't sure.

Wine sales in grocery stores. Sixty-three percent favor "letting 
grocery, convenience and other stores that sell food in Tennessee 
sell wine if they are located in places that allow the sale of 
alcoholic beverages." Twenty-six percent are opposed, and the rest aren't sure.

Repeal of the health care law. Thirty-one percent would like to see 
Congress repeal the new federal health care law and not replace it. 
Another 22 percent want the law repealed and replaced with a 
Republican alternative, 13 percent would like the law expanded and 11 
percent would like the law kept as it is. Twenty-one percent don't know.

Staff Report
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom