That’s the number. At least according to Public Policy Polling. That seems rather high. So I decided to go back and look at the RACMAR variable in the General Social Survey. Here’s the question:
Do you think there should be laws against marriages between African-Americans and whites?
They kept asking the question for 30 years, but dropped it in 2002. Here’s the reason:
By 2002 it was a consistent finding that less than 10% of Americans would accede to the proposition that interracial marriage should be legally banned. So the finding that that 46% of Mississippi Republicans agree with that position, and that only 40% reject it outright, is somewhat curious. Here’s the question in PPP:
Do you think interracial marriage should be legal or illegal?
The outcomes were:
– 40% said legal
– 46% said illegal
– 14% were not sure
Remember that the sample was limited to Mississippi Republicans. Let’s go back and look at some of the demographic correlates for the responses to RACMAR between 1998 and 2002, when the proportion responding yes and no was relatively constant. I’ll focus on region and politics.
Ban interracial marriage
Liberal
7
Moderate
10
Conservative
12
Democrat
10
Independent
10
Republican
11
New England
7
Middle Atlantic
8
East North Central
9
West North Central
9
South Atlantic
11
East …