The
Latest Polls on Portugal Abortion Referendum
Portugal
Voters Prepare for Key Sunday Vote on Legalizing Abortion
Lisbon,
Portugal (LifeNews.com) -- Portugal has been intensely debating
abortion for the last several months as it prepares for
a vote Sunday on whether to legalize abortion. Polls initially
showed strong support for the abortion referendum, but pro-life
groups and the Catholic Church have cut the margin with
a strong educational campaign. If approved, the referendum
would legalize abortion within the first 10 weeks of pregnancy.
Currently, the western European nation only allows abortion
through the 12th week of pregnancy in cases of rape, incest,
life of the mother, or when the unborn child has severe
physical or mental handicaps. It is one of just a handful
of nations on the continent, including Ireland, Poland and
Malta, that make abortions illegal. To go into effect, a
majority of voters must approve the abortion referendum
and more than 50 percent of the nation's residents must
turn out in order for the vote to count. Portuguese voters
turned back a previous effort to legalize abortion in 1998
on a 51-49 percentage margin and just 30 percent of the
people voted. The campaign against the referendum has been
working and more than 9,000 pro-life advocates took to the
streets in Portugal last month to oppose it. A poll released
in early January by Portuguese newspaper Correio da Manha
and the pollster Aximage showed 64 percent of the Portuguese
people favored the abortion referendum. However, a new survey
published late last month in the daily Jornal de Noticias
found only 38 percent of Portuguese voters will support
legalizing abortion. That's down from the newspaper's earlier
poll showing 53 percent of registered voters would back
it. Read
the complete story.
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