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“Poll Shows Oregonians Still Support Capital Punishment”

February 1, 2012

020112_deathpenalty_poll_smallThe title of this post is the headline of this local article from the Beaver State.  The piece starts and ends this way:

Governor John Kitzhaber raised the issue of Oregon’s death penalty this winter, when he placed a moratorium on executions for the rest of his tenure. He urged Oregonians to “find a better solution.”

But now, a new poll by OPB and DHM Research shows that most Oregonians favor the death penalty…. The poll found that 57 percent favor the death penalty for some crimes; 39 percent oppose it. Four percent say the don’t know.

Su Midghall, lead pollster for DHM Research, says those numbers haven’t moved in a while. “Historically, Oregonians haven’t changed a lot in their support for the death penalty. It was high 10 years ago, meaning over a majority then, it’s still over a majority today.”

The telephone survey polled 500 people throughout Oregon. It was conducted last week, and has a margin of error of plus-or-minus 4.4 percent.

The poll found you could make some predictions about who supports and who opposes executions. “More men and more Republicans favor the death penalty and they do tend to be outside of the urban core.  Let’s look at it from the other angle though, the ones who are most opposed.  They’re college educated female Democrats,” according to Midghall.

Those two groups make up the people who say they “strongly” favor or oppose the death penalty.  But Midghall says there’s an important group of people in the middle. “We have 60 percent almost of Oregonians who support the death penalty for certain crimes.  Half of that, so about 30 percent are soft in their support, meaning with additional information they could be persuaded to look at things differently.”…

A discussion is just what Governor Kitzhaber asked for when he issued a temporary reprieve in November, stopping the execution of murderer, Gary Haugen.  In an interview that will run on OPB’s Think Out Loud Wednesday Kitzhaber reacted to the OPB DHM poll that shows a majority of Oregonians support capital punishment.

The governor explainied his actions, “I didn’t abolish the death penalty. I didn’t commute the sentences of everyone on death row to life in prison, which I could have done.  I simply stayed the execution of Mr. Haugen and made it clear that I’m not going to carry out that sentence during my term in office.  With the hope of fostering a discussion about the death penalty.  A, whether we still want it.   And B, if we do want it, whether the way the death penalty is set up in Oregon is really what people thought they were voting for back in 1984.”  That’s when Oregonians reinstated capital punishment.