Make America the 1990s Again
Salem Radio Network Now Has a One-Two Punch Against Liberal America in the...
White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles Felt 'Blindsided' by Vanity Fair Article
Yes, Progressives Really Did This on the Anniversary of the Boston Tea Party
Who Is Mustapha Kourbach? And Why Is Brown University Scrubbing His Entire Existence...
What John Fetterman Said to Chris Cuomo Is Going to Trigger Another Dem...
Patriots Rally Around Target Employee Harassed by Leftist Karen
'Avner's Is Closed': Jewish Bagel Shop Shutters Doors Thanks to Ongoing Threats, Antisemit...
Keir Starmer Says Violence Against Women and Girls a 'National Emergency' (Guess What...
When Process Fails Justice
A $600 Billion Gift to Wall Street, Paid for by the Public
Okay, the Jews Leave…and Then?
Another Year, Another $2 Trillion in Debt
Texas News Vlogger Asks SCOTUS to Decide Whether Criminalizing Journalism Is 'Obviously Un...
The Hidden Public Safety Engine That Doesn’t Cost Taxpayers a Dime
OPINION

The voters speak: A history of marriage votes

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (BP) -- Every state that has voted on the issue of marriage at the ballot has affirmed the traditional definition of marriage being between a man and a woman.
Advertisement

Following is a list of each state that has voted on the issue. Unless noted, each vote involved a constitutional marriage amendment. Passage of the various proposals has come by an average margin of 67-33 percent.

1998

Alaska, 68-32 percent

Hawaii, 69-31 percent

2000

*California, 61-39 percent

Nevada, 70-30 percent (first of two required votes)

2002

Nevada, 67-33 percent (second of two required votes)

2004

Arkansas, 75-25 percent

Georgia, 76-24 percent

Kentucky, 75-25 percent

Louisiana, 78-22 percent

Michigan, 59-41 percent

Mississippi, 86-14 percent

Missouri, 71-29 percent

Montana, 67-33 percent

North Dakota, 73-27 percent

Ohio, 62-38 percent

Oklahoma, 76-24 percent

Oregon, 57-43 percent

Utah, 66-34 percent

2005

Kansas, 70-30 percent

2006

Alabama, 81-19 percent

Colorado, 56-44 percent

Idaho, 63-37 percent

South Carolina, 78-22 percent

Advertisement

South Dakota, 52-48 percent

Tennessee, 81-19 percent

Virginia, 57-43 percent

Wisconsin, 59-41 percent

2008

***Arizona, 56-44 percent

California, 52-48 percent

Florida, 62-38 percent

2009

**Maine, 53-47 percent

2012

North Carolina, 61-39 percent

*California's 2000 vote was an initiative and not a constitutional amendment.

**Arizona voters defeated a marriage amendment in 2006, only to pass one two years later.

***Maine's initiative was not a constitutional amendment but a "people's veto" that overturned a gay "marriage" law.

Copyright (c) 2012 Southern Baptist Convention, Baptist Press www.BPNews.net

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement