Explaining voting in the 2017 Australian same-sex marriage plebiscite

Date

2018

Authors

Snagovsky, Feodor
McAllister, Ian

Journal Title

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Publisher

Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group

Abstract

The 2017 Australian Marriage Law Postal Survey led to the adoption of same-sex marriage. Using ecological analysis, this paper tests five hypotheses to explain voting in the plebiscite. Social characteristics exerted a strong influence on the vote, with a higher yes' vote in more affluent and suburban electorates, and a higher no' vote in electorates with large numbers of traditional households. The strongest predictor of a no' vote was electorates with large proportions of newly arrived immigrants. Electorates that had larger proportions of female same-sex couples displayed a higher yes' vote. Higher turnout in the plebiscite benefitted the yes' vote. Finally, the views of the local MP on the issue were positively related to the result in their electorate.

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Citation

Source

Australian Journal of Political Science

Type

Journal article

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Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until

2040-01-01