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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region Forums"U.S. Death Penalty Support Lowest in More Than 40 Years"
U.S. Death Penalty Support Lowest in More Than 40 Yearsby Jeffrey M. Jones at Gallup
http://www.gallup.com/poll/165626/death-penalty-support-lowest-years.aspx
"SNIP..................................
PRINCETON, NJ -- Sixty percent of Americans say they favor the death penalty for convicted murderers, the lowest level of support Gallup has measured since November 1972, when 57% were in favor. Death penalty support peaked at 80% in 1994, but it has gradually declined since then.
..........
Gallup first asked Americans their views on the death penalty using this question in 1936, and has updated it periodically since then, including annual updates since 1999.
Americans have typically favored the death penalty; in fact, support has exceeded opposition in all but one survey, conducted in May 1966, during an era marked by philosophical and legal challenges to the death penalty from the mid-1950s through the early 1970s. Americans' support for the death penalty waned during that time. The culmination of that era was the Supreme Court's 1972 Furman v. Georgia decision, which invalidated all state death penalty statutes on technical grounds but stopped short of declaring the practice itself unconstitutional. Four years later, the court ruled that several newly written death penalty laws were constitutional, and executions resumed in the U.S. shortly thereafter.
From then until the mid-'90s, death penalty support climbed, reaching 80% in 1994, a year in which Americans consistently named crime as the most important problem facing the United States.
..................................SNIP"
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"U.S. Death Penalty Support Lowest in More Than 40 Years" (Original Post)
applegrove
Oct 2013
OP
applegrove
(118,659 posts)1. Are Americans becoming more compassionate?
dsc
(52,162 posts)2. I think you can thank DNA testing for this as much as anything else
People being released after decades in jail for crimes they didn't commit has lessened confidence in the justice system.
applegrove
(118,659 posts)3. Right you are.