Pubdate: Mon, 25 Oct 2004
Source: Missoulian (MT)
Copyright: 2004 Missoulian
Contact:  http://www.missoulian.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/720
Note: Only prints letters from within its print circulation area
Author: Allison Farrell, of the Missoulian State Bureau
Cited: Initiative 148 http://www.montanacares.org/
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Initiative+148 (Initiative 148)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal)

POLL: MARRIAGE INITIATIVE SUPPORT STILL STRONG

HELENA - Voters still show strong support for a constitutional
initiative seeking to ban gay marriage in Montana, a new Lee
Newspapers poll shows.

Likely voters favor Constitutional Initiative 96 by a 59 to 34 percent
margin, with 7 percent undecided. Support for the ban remains similar
from a Lee poll last month that showed voters favoring it 61 to 32
percent, with 7 percent undecided.

CI-96, which would limit Montana marriages to unions between one man
and one woman, garnered slightly more support from men - 60 percent -
compared with 58 percent from women.

The telephone poll, which surveyed 625 registered Montana voters, was
conducted Tuesday and Wednesday by Mason-Dixon Polling & Research
Inc., of Washington, D.C., for Lee Newspapers of Montana. It has a
margin of error of plus or minus 4 percentage points.

Support for another initiative, which would allow the medical use of
marijuana, jumped somewhat from the September poll. The October poll
results show likely voters favoring Initiative 148 by a 63 to 28
percent margin, with 9 percent undecided. In September, voters favored
I-148 by 58 to 29 percent, with 13 percent undecided.

Support for the medical use of marijuana is equal among men and women,
at 63 percent.

Finally, support for Initiative 149, the proposed 140 percent tobacco
tax increase, has jumped in the recent Lee poll. Likely voters favor
the proposal by a 66 to 28 percent margin, with 6 percent undecided,
the October poll showed. In the September poll, the margin was 59
percent for to 30 percent against, with 11 percent undecided.

Under I-149, cigarette taxes would jump $1 per pack, from 70 cents to
$1.70. The tax on snuff would increase from 35 cents to 85 cents an
ounce and taxes on other tobacco products would increase from 25
percent to 50 percent of wholesale price. The overall price of tobacco
would jump 25 percent.

Support for the initiative remains even between the genders at 66
percent. 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake