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Among all registered voters, 40 percent in the ABCNEWS/Washington Post poll support vouchers having the government give parents money to help pay for their children to attend a private or religious school while 55 percent are opposed.
Four in 10 of those supporters peel away when asked if theyd support vouchers even if it meant less money for the public schools, as critics charge. Given that outcome, support for vouchers falls to 23 percent and opposition rises to 70 percent.
Parents of school-age children divide 47-47 percent on the question of vouchers. Again, though, if it meant cutting public school funding, that shifts to 66 percent opposed, 27 percent in favor.
 Divide on school vouchers:  |
| |
School Vouchers |
If it means cutting public school funding |
| |
Support |
Oppose |
Support |
Oppose |
| |
 |
 |
| All reg. voters |
40% |
55% |
23% |
70% |
| School-age parents |
47% |
47% |
27% |
66% |
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No Surprise
Concern among parents about retaining public school funding shouldnt be a surprise, since 77 percent of parents in this survey have their child or children exclusively in public schools. Presumably those parents wouldnt appreciate a cut in public school funding.
Indeed, most public school parents arent looking for a change: Even if vouchers worth $3,500 in tuition assistance were available to them, 69 percent of those parents say theyd be most likely to keep their child in public school rather than move to a private or religious institution.
Vouchers have been a prominent election issue this year. Theyre on the ballot in state initiatives in California and Michigan, and Republican presidential nominee George W. Bush favors vouchers for children in underperforming schools.
Groups
Views on vouchers vary most according to political predispositions. Democrats oppose them by 69-26 percent and independents oppose them by 56 percent-40 percent. Among Republicans, the margin is closer; they oppose vouchers by 53-43 percent.
Among supporters of school vouchers, only 27 percent are still in favor if it means cutting public school funding. (ABCNEWS.com)
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Apart from Republicans, only young adults lend majority support to vouchers, 53-44 percent. And conservatives divide 48-46 percent on the issue. If it meant cutting public school funding, though, all three of these groups move into opposition.
Methodology
This ABCNEWS/Washington Post poll was conducted by telephone Oct. 6-9 among a random national sample of 965 registered voters. The results have a three-point error margin. Field work was done by TNS Intersearch of Horsham, Pa. |