Support for cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment in Louisiana has fall­en by sev­en per­cent­age points in the last four years, accord­ing to the 2022 Louisiana Survey by the Reilly Center for Media & Public Affairs at Louisiana State University.

Four years ago sup­port­ers of the death penal­ty out­num­bered oppo­nents by 24 points, today that dif­fer­ence is only 13 points,” Mike Henderson, Associate Professor at the LSU Manship School of Mass Communication and prin­ci­pal author of the report on the sur­vey, said.

51% of respon­dents to the annu­al sur­vey report­ed that they favor the death penal­ty, down from the 58% who expressed sup­port for cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment the last time the Reilly Center asked the ques­tion in 2018. Opposition to the death penal­ty rose four per­cent­age points, from 34% to 38% in that same period.

Although sup­port for cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment dropped among Louisianans of all polit­i­cal affil­i­a­tions, the decline was most pro­nounced among those iden­ti­fy­ing as Independents. 61% of Independents in 2018 said that they favored the death penal­ty. That fell to 50% in the 2022 sur­vey, an 11 per­cent­age-point decline. 42% of Independents said they oppose the death penal­ty, up 11 per­cent­age points from the 31% who expressed oppo­si­tion in 2018. Eight per­cent of respon­dents in both year’s sur­veys were unde­cid­ed or declined to answer.

54% of Louisiana Democrats said that they opposed the death penal­ty, as com­pared to 32% of Democratic respon­dents who favored it. While death-penal­ty sup­port among Democrats fell by 11 per­cent­age points from 43% in 2018, oppo­si­tion rose by only one per­cent­age-point from 53%. 14% of Democratic respon­dents said they were unde­cid­ed on the issue or declined to answer, up from 4% in the 2018 survey.

Support for cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment also declined by four per­cent­age points among Louisiana Republicans, falling from 74% in 2018 to 70% in the 2022 Louisiana Survey. Opposition to the death penal­ty increased mar­gin­al­ly, from 19% to 20%, with the per­cent­age of respon­dents unde­cid­ed or declin­ing to answer up by three per­cent­age points, from 7% to 10%.

The 2022 Louisiana Survey polled 508 adult respon­dents inter­viewed via land­line tele­phone, cell­phone, or online ques­tion­naire between February 21 and March 14, 2022. The Reilly Center report­ed that the poll has a mar­gin of error of ± 5.8 percentage points.

Louisiana’s thir­teen per­cent­age point dif­fer­ence between sup­port for and oppo­si­tion to cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment was slight­ly high­er than the nation­al mar­gin of eleven per­cent­age points report­ed in the October 2021 Gallup poll, which report­ed 54% of respon­dents sup­port­ing the death penal­ty and 43% oppos­ing. The decline in sup­port for the death penal­ty among all polit­i­cal affil­i­a­tions is con­sis­tent with the results of all major national polls.

Louisiana’s declin­ing sup­port for the death penal­ty is also con­sis­tent with trends in neigh­bor­ing states. Polling in Oklahoma in October 2021 found that sup­port for cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment had declined by ten per­cent­age points since 2015. An April 2021 University of Texas/​Texas Tribune inter­net sur­vey found that sup­port for the death penal­ty had fall­en by 12 per­cent­age points in the state since February 2015.

I sort of think peo­ple have seen those high pro­file cas­es [of pos­si­ble inno­cence] and have re-con­sid­ered whether [the death penal­ty is] the best sen­tenc­ing mea­sure to han­dle these kinds of crimes,” Henderson said. Perhaps we are see­ing a small reflec­tion of that trend in this state and if it con­tin­ues, then the Legislature may recon­sid­er that view in their pol­i­cy a decade from now or per­haps soon­er,” he said.

Citation Guide
Sources

Jeff Palermo, LSU Survey: Support for death penal­ty in Louisiana slips, WWL Radio, New Orleans, May 2, 2022; Michael Henderson, 2022 Louisiana Survey Report 6, Reilly Center for Media & Public Affairs, Louisiana State University, April 28, 2022; News Release, 2022 Louisiana Survey Shows Polarization Over Abortion Grows While Support for Legal Access Increases Substantially among Democrats, Louisiana State University LSU Manship School of Mass Communication, April 28, 2022; Allison Bruhl, Louisiana res­i­dents share opin­ions on abor­tion, death penal­ty in sur­vey, WGNO-TV, New Orleans, April 28, 2022; Olivia C. Landry, Residents split on abor­tion, death penal­ty in Louisiana, sur­vey finds, LSU Manship School News Service, April 282022.