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Those Favoring Stem Cell Research Increases to a 73 to 11 Percent Majority
A good issue for the Democrats

In 2001, a Harris Poll reported that a 3-to-1 majority believed that stem cell research
should be allowed. Three years later, a new Harris Poll finds that this majority
supporting stem cell research has increased to more than 6-to-1. Other changes
since 2001 are a substantial increase in the number of people who have seen, read
or heard about the debate on stem cell research, stronger support for arguments in
favor of stem cell research and less support for arguments against it.

These results – if found in the private polling for the Democrats - may explain the
decision to feature the strong plea in favor of stem cell research by President
Reagan’s son, Ron Reagan, at the Democratic Convention in Boston.

As Democrats looked for issues where large majorities of the public support their
positions and oppose those of President Bush, stem cell research must have caught
their attention. In this new survey, the big majorities of the public who support their
position on stem cell research must look very attractive. Furthermore, big majorities
of Republicans and Independents, not just Democrats, support stem cell research.

Having said that, we should note that President Bush has not formally opposed all
stem cell research. The law which he supported and signed restricted the use of
federal funding (not other funding) for stem cell research to a small number of
embryonic stem cell lines. It was a compromise which had the effect of restricting,
but not eliminating, stem cell research.

These are some of the results of a nationwide survey of 2,242 adults interviewed
online by Harris Interactive® between July 12 and 18, 2004.

The main findings include:
Those who say they have seen, heard or read about the debate on whether to allow
stem cell research have increased from 68% in 2001 to 83% now.

The majority who believe that stem cell research should be allowed has increased
from 61% to 21% in favor in 2001 to 73% to 11% in favor now.

This majority support for stem cell research includes almost all Democrats with
opinions (80% to 5%) and Independents (83% to 7%) and a large, if smaller,
majority of Republicans (60% to 18%).

Those who believe that "using stem cells from human embryos for research comes
too close to allowing scientists play God" have fallen sharply from 40% in 2001 to
only 19% now.

Those who believe that "allowing any medical research using stem cells from
human embryos should be forbidden because it is unethical and immoral" have also
fallen sharply from 32% to 15% over the last three years.

Religion and stem cell research

The level of opposition to stem cell research varies according to people’s religious
beliefs. Those who describe themselves as "very religious" are much more likely to
oppose stem research than those who are "not at all" or "not very" religious (23%
vs. 4%). Born-Again Christians are more likely to oppose it than are other Christians
(21% vs. 9%); and Catholics are somewhat more likely to oppose it than Protestants
(15% vs. 10%).

However, clear majorities of all religious groups we analyzed favor stem cell
research.

A methodological note

Readers should note that the number of "not sures" are higher in this new survey
than they were in 2001. This does not necessarily mean that more people are
unsure now than they were in 2001. In this new survey, respondents were offered
"not sure" as a possible response. In the 2001 survey, they were not told that this
was a choice but they could still give it. The increase in "not sures" is probably a
result of this change in the interview.

SNIP

Tables 1 - 3 (Tables, spreadsheets, other formatted work, don't adapt well to plain
text e-mail ... murray)

SNIP

Methodology

The Harris Poll® was conducted online within the United States between July 12
and 18, 2004 among a nationwide cross section of 2,242 adults (aged 18 years and
over). Figures for age, sex, race, education, region and household income were
weighted where necessary to bring them into line with their actual proportions in the
population. Propensity score weighting was also used to adjust for respondents’
propensity to be online.

In theory, with probability samples of this size, one could say with 95 percent
certainty that the results have a sampling error of plus or minus 2 percentage points
of what they would be if the entire adult population had been polled with complete
accuracy. Unfortunately, there are several other possible sources of error in all polls
or surveys that are probably more serious than theoretical calculations of sampling
error. They include refusals to be interviewed (non-response), question wording and
question order, and weighting. It is impossible to quantify the errors that may result
from these factors. This online sample was not a probability sample.

These statements conform to the principles of disclosure of the National Council on
Public Polls.

SOURCE: The Harris Poll® #58, August 18, 2004
http://www.harrisinteractive.com/harris_poll/printerfriend/index.asp?PID=488

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