As The
Advocate reported earlier this week, a strong majority of gays and lesbians
supported passing the Employment Non-Discrimination Act even though it did not
include protections for transgender people, according to a poll commissioned by
the Human Rights Campaign. Since then, The Advocate has obtained the full
results of the poll questions about ENDA, which passed the House of
Representatives Wednesday in a 235-184 vote.
The poll, a random survey of
514 LGBT Americans conducted by Knowledge Networks Inc., of Menlo Park, Calif.,
asked participants two questions concerning ENDA. The first asked which of the
following three statements was closest to reflecting their views:
A.
National gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender civil rights organizations
should oppose this proposal because it excludes transgender people.
B. National gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender civil rights organizations should support this proposal because it helps gay, lesbian, and bisexual workers and is a step toward transgender employment rights.
C. National gay,
lesbian, bisexual, and transgender civil rights organizations should adopt a
neutral stance for this proposal because while it helps gay, lesbians, and
bisexual workers, it also excludes transgender people.
Of those surveyed,
67.7% agreed with statement B, while 15.8% agreed with statement A, 12.8% agreed
with statement C, and 3.6% did not answer.
The second question asked
people the following: "This proposal would make it illegal to fire gay, lesbian,
or bisexual workers because of their sexual orientation. This proposal does NOT
include people who are transgender. Would you favor or oppose this
proposal?"
In response, 59.1% said they favored the proposal and felt
strongly about it, 15.4% said they favored it but did not feel strongly about
it, 15.1% opposed it and felt strongly about it, 8.8% opposed it but did not
feel strongly about it, and 1.6% did not answer.
Of the 514
people the poll surveyed, 246 respondents identified as male, 262 identified as
female, five identified as female-to-male transgender, and one person identified
as male-to-female transgender. The poll was conducted October 2-5. The margin of
error was +/- 4.3 percentage points at a 95% confidence level.
More than
300 LGBT organizations nationwide opposed ENDA -- which will next be taken up in
the U.S. Senate -- because it did not contain protections for transgender
people. (The Advocate)
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