Fichier de travail (INPUT) : ../DUMP-TEXT/enUS_13-utf8.txt
Encodage utilisé (INPUT) : utf-8
Forme recherchée : [Ss]ame[\s-][Ss]ex [Mm]arriages?
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- Ligne n°280 : WASHINGTON — The reaction would have been very different 10 years ago: Had the U.S. Supreme Court struck down bans on same-sex marriage in any state in 2004, conservative Republicans would have howled in protest.
- Ligne n°282 : But this week, when the justices upheld lower-court rulings that essentially legalized same-sex marriage in five states, a sizable number of Republicans seemed to shrug off the news as no big deal.
- Ligne n°286 : A Pew Research Center survey last month showed that 49 percent of Americans favor same-sex marriage, while 41 percent oppose it. A Pew poll from 2004 showed that, at the time, 60 percent of Americans opposed gay marriage, while 31 percent supported it.
- Ligne n°288 : Ten years after voters in Ohio approved a constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriage, 62 percent to 38 percent, half of the states and the District of Columbia permit same-sex marriage. A Washington Post poll last year showed that 81 percent of people younger than 30 support same-sex marriage.
- Ligne n°288 : Ten years after voters in Ohio approved a constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriage, 62 percent to 38 percent, half of the states and the District of Columbia permit same-sex marriage. A Washington Post poll last year showed that 81 percent of people younger than 30 support same-sex marriage.
- Ligne n°288 : Ten years after voters in Ohio approved a constitutional amendment banning same-sex marriage, 62 percent to 38 percent, half of the states and the District of Columbia permit same-sex marriage. A Washington Post poll last year showed that 81 percent of people younger than 30 support same-sex marriage.
- Ligne n°292 : Analysts say that as the issue fades, it will be less of an obstacle for potential Republican presidential candidates such as Sen. Rob Portman of Ohio who favor same-sex marriage. Portman announced last year that his son Will is gay and reversed his longtime opposition to same-sex marriage.
- Ligne n°292 : Analysts say that as the issue fades, it will be less of an obstacle for potential Republican presidential candidates such as Sen. Rob Portman of Ohio who favor same-sex marriage. Portman announced last year that his son Will is gay and reversed his longtime opposition to same-sex marriage.
- Ligne n°298 : Yet Portman’s stance is fraught with political danger. Politico.com reported this week that only four House Republicans and four Senate Republicans support same-sex marriage. Republicans might not want to talk about same-sex marriage, but they are not embracing it, either.
- Ligne n°298 : Yet Portman’s stance is fraught with political danger. Politico.com reported this week that only four House Republicans and four Senate Republicans support same-sex marriage. Republicans might not want to talk about same-sex marriage, but they are not embracing it, either.
- Ligne n°300 : The Pew poll shows that only 34 percent of Republicans back same-sex marriage and that 75 percent of white evangelicals — who make up a strong segment of GOP voters in the early presidential contests of Iowa and South Carolina — oppose gay marriage.
- Ligne n°306 : In a statement, Portman said he backs “same-sex marriage and the Supreme Court’s ruling opens up the possibility of marriage to more Americans.” But Portman said that “the best way to achieve enduring change is at the kitchen table, not in the courtroom. It is citizens persuading their fellow citizens, and it is happening all across the country.”
- Ligne n°312 : Cruz is likely to run for president, and his opposition to same-sex marriage would resonate with social conservatives who make up a large percentage of Republicans voting in the 2016 Iowa caucuses.
- Ligne n°314 : In 2012, former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum, an ardent opponent of abortion rights and same-sex marriage, won Iowa with 25 percent of the vote, while in 2008, former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee — another social conservative — won with 34 percent.
- Ligne n°316 : But those close to Portman point out that neither Santorum nor Huckabee were able to win the nomination. They suggest that a number of GOP voters in Iowa might overlook a candidate’s position on same-sex marriage.
- Ligne n°320 : As recently as 2004, opposition to same-sex marriage might have helped President George W. Bush win Ohio, whose electoral votes gave him a second term. Bush carried the state on the same day that voters approved an amendment to the Ohio constitution banning same-sex marriage.
- Ligne n°320 : As recently as 2004, opposition to same-sex marriage might have helped President George W. Bush win Ohio, whose electoral votes gave him a second term. Bush carried the state on the same day that voters approved an amendment to the Ohio constitution banning same-sex marriage.