Public Opinion

Political Affiliation and the Death Penalty

Pew Resource Center 2015 Poll on Political Affiliation and the Death Penalty

A 2015 nation­al poll by the Pew Resource Center report­ed declin­ing sup­port for the death penal­ty in the United States across vir­tu­al­ly all demo­graph­ic groups, with the drop in sup­port espe­cial­ly pro­nounced among Democrats. Pew Resource Center, Less Support for Death Penalty, Especially Among Democrats (Apr. 16, 2015). Pew report­ed sig­nif­i­cant drops in sup­port for the death penal­ty among all polit­i­cal affil­i­a­tions between 1995 and 2015 (see the chart to the right), with declines of 31 and 22 per­cent­age points among Democrats and Independents, respec­tive­ly, and a 10 per­cent­age-point drop in sup­port for the death penal­ty among Republicans. As of March 2015, 77% of Republicans, 57% of Independents, and 40% of Democrats said they favored the death penal­ty. 17% of Republicans, 37% of Independents, and 56% of Democrats said they opposed capital punishment.

From November 2011 to March 2015, Pew report­ed sig­nif­i­cant declines in sup­port for the death penal­ty among Democrats and Independents (9 and 7 per­cent­age points, respec­tive­ly), and a slight decline among Republicans as a whole (2 per­cent­age points). However, sup­port for the death penal­ty among those who iden­ti­fied them­self as con­ser­v­a­tive Republicans fell 7 per­cent­age points dur­ing this peri­od, match­ing the drop for Independents and for those who iden­ti­fied them­selves as conservative/​moderate Democrats. Support for the death penal­ty among lib­er­al Democrats fell by 11 per­cent­age points (to 29%) over this period.

The Pew Poll also asked respon­dents ques­tions about whether the death penal­ty was moral­ly jus­ti­fied, the risk of exe­cut­ing inno­cent per­sons, whether the death penal­ty is a deter­rent, and racial dis­par­i­ties in the appli­ca­tion of the death penal­ty. Republicans were sig­nif­i­cant­ly more like­ly to say that the death penal­ty was moral­ly jus­ti­fied (80%), as com­pared to Democrats (50%) and Independents (64%). 79% of Democrats believed that the death penal­ty car­ried a risk of putting an inno­cent per­son to death, as con­trast­ed with 71% of Independents and 61% of Republicans. A sig­nif­i­cant major­i­ty of Democrats (71%) and Independents (60%) believed that the death penal­ty was not a deter­rent, a view shared by about half of all Republicans (48%). The biggest divide on death penal­ty views — a near­ly 40 per­cent­age point split — came in the area of race. While 70% of Democrats believed that minori­ties were more like­ly to face the death penal­ty, only half of Independents (52%) and few­er than a third of Republicans (31%) shared that view.

For addi­tion­al infor­ma­tion on Professor Frank Baumgartner’s Index of Death Penalty Public Opinion, click here.