Author Topic: Poll Suggests Proposed Florida Abortion Amendment Has Enough Support to Pass  (Read 101 times)

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Online Fishrrman

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https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2024/05/10/poll-suggests-proposed-florida-abortion-amendment-enough-support-pass/

Poll Suggests Proposed Florida Abortion Amendment Has Enough Support to Pass
5/09/2024
by Katherine Hamilton

Florida voters could narrowly pass an amendment enshrining the right to abortion in the state constitution in November.

A survey by the Florida Chamber of Commerce found that 61 percent of likely Florida voters say they support the abortion amendment, above the 60 percent support needed to pass the measure. However, the results are within the survey’s ±4 percent margin of error. The poll found that 29 percent of respondents oppose the amendment, and 10 percent are undecided.

The Florida Chamber of Commerce poll follows two other polls showing the abortion amendment falling short of the support needed to pass.

A poll released in mid-April by Florida Atlantic University (FAU) found that 49 percent of Florida voters plan to vote yes on the abortion measure, called Amendment 4. Nineteen percent oppose the measure, while 32 percent are unsure how they will vote.

An Emerson College Polling survey also released in April found that 42 percent of Florida voters intend to vote for the amendment, while 25 percent plan to vote no and 32 percent are “unsure.”

The Florida Chamber’s poll also found that fewer than six in ten (58 percent) of respondents plan to vote in support of an amendment that would legalize recreational marijuana — also within the survey’s margin of error. The Florida Chamber of Commerce poll was conducted between April 28 and May 7 by Cherry Communications with 609 likely voters.

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Poster's comment:
Could Florida actually end up with one of the more liberal abortion policies in the country?
One that is "enshrined" right into the state constitution?

Once again, blame it on "Dobbs" -- the gift that keeps on giving -- for THE LEFT, that is.

15 years from now, looking back, rational observers will conclude that "the right to life" was actually BETTER-PROTECTED under Roe, than it will have become under Dobbs...
(please comment to how I'm wrong)