logo
Fewer than half of young men believe abortion should be legal, poll finds

Fewer than half of young men believe abortion should be legal, poll finds

Independent8 hours ago

Fewer than half of young men believe abortion should be legal, far less than the general population, a shocking new poll has found.
Just 46 per cent of 18 to 36-year-old men believe abortion should be legal in all or most cases, compared with 71 per cent among the general population.
Amid concerns about the rise of the manosphere - a growing online community of hypermasculine influencers - the Ipsos poll showed a stark drop in support for abortion in those aged under 36.
Eight in 10 55 to 75-year-old men support abortion being legal in all or most cases, while three-quarters of 35 to 54-year-olds do. And, among those aged 18 to 36, more than a third of men think abortion should be illegal in most or all cases, the poll found.
Labour MP Stella Creasy, a prominent campaigner in parliament for abortion access, told The Independent: 'Those [who are] complacent that abortion access is supported in this country don't understand the culture war is chipping away at all women's rights, including healthcare.'
The polling comes before MPs vote this week on decriminalising abortion through amendments to the Crime and Policing Bill.
Currently, abortions can legally be carried out within the first 24 weeks of pregnancy in England, Scotland and Wales.
They must be approved by two doctors, with the health professionals agreeing continuing with the pregnancy would be riskier for the physical or mental health of the woman than having an abortion. While this is what the law stipulates, in reality, abortions can be given, whatever the person's reasoning.
But an amendment tabled by Ms Creasy would see abortion enshrined as a human right, as has been done in Northern Ireland.
'The only way we can stop women being targeted in this way and ensure they have safe and legal access is to designate abortion a human right as we have in Northern Ireland, and only new clause 20 to the policing bill will do that,' she added.
A rival amendment tabled by Labour's Tonia Antoniazzi - which would mean women can no longer be prosecuted for terminating a pregnancy in England and Wales - is seen as more likely to get the backing of MPs.
Ms Antoniazzi told The Independent the poll should serve as 'a reminder to male MPs for the vote on Tuesday that they can't just leave this work to women'.
She urged colleagues to back her amendment and added: 'This is one poll. It's important to recognise that this poll, just like every other on abortion, shows that the country as a whole remains staunchly pro-choice.'
But she said the findings were a 'clear example of the fact that women's hard-won rights can never be taken for granted'.
It 'underscores why we must always keep fighting to preserve and advance them, as we do,' she added.
It came as a row broke out in the final days before Tuesday's votes, with supporters of Ms Creasy's amendment accusing backers of Ms Antoniazzi of a campaign to get MPs to withdraw their support.
Ms Creasy fears Ms Antoniazzi's amendment does not go far enough in enshrining and protecting the right to abortion, but the British Pregnancy Advisory Service (BPAS) said it has 'profound concerns' about the drafting of Ms Creasy's amendment.
It called on MPs to withdraw their support for Ms Creasy's proposal and refuse to support it.
Ahead of the votes, Ipsos found broad support for abortion access except among young men.
The pollster also found that around half of voters think the current 24-week time limit for abortions is 'about right', with a quarter saying it is too late and just 4 per cent saying it is too early. Nigel Farage said last month that it is 'ludicrous we allow abortion up to 24 weeks' and that the law is 'totally out of date'.
And, asked about illegal abortions, just over half of voters said the person who performed an abortion should face a penalty, compared with under a third who think the woman having the abortion should.
Ipsos Pollster Kate Duxbury at Ipsos said: "While the majority of Britons support legal abortion, with seven in ten in favour, our polling reveals a significant fault line: less than half of young men aged 16-34 agree.
'This divergence, coupled with the fact that around half of Britons think the current 24-week limit is 'about right', highlights the complexities facing policymakers as they consider decriminalisation. It's clear that public opinion is far from monolithic, demanding a nuanced approach to this sensitive issue."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Nationwide police operation on grooming gangs announced
Nationwide police operation on grooming gangs announced

Sky News

timean hour ago

  • Sky News

Nationwide police operation on grooming gangs announced

A nationwide police operation to track down those in grooming gangs has been announced by the Home Office. The National Crime Agency (NCA) will target those who have sexually exploited children as part of a grooming gang, and will investigate cases that were not previously progressed. Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said in a statement: "The vulnerable young girls who suffered unimaginable abuse at the hands of groups of adult men have now grown into brave women who are rightly demanding justice for what they went through when they were just children. "Not enough people listened to them then. That was wrong and unforgivable. We are changing that now. "More than 800 grooming gang cases have already been identified by police after I asked them to look again at cases which had closed too early. "Now we are asking the National Crime Agency to lead a major nationwide operation to track down more perpetrators and bring them to justice." 1:40 The NCA will work in partnership with police forces around the country and specialist officers from the Child Sexual Exploitation Taskforce, Operation Hydrant - which supports police forces to address all complex and high-profile cases of child sexual abuse - and the Tackling Organised Exploitation Programme. It comes after Sir Keir Starmer announced a national inquiry into child sex abuse on Saturday, ahead of the release of a government-requested audit into the scale of grooming gangs across the country, which concluded a nationwide probe was necessary. The prime minister previously argued a national inquiry was not necessary, but changed his view following an audit into group-based child sexual abuse led by Baroness Casey, set to be published next week. Ms Cooper is set to address parliament on Monday about the findings of the near 200-page report, which is expected to warn that white British girls were "institutionally ignored for fear of racism". One person familiar with the report said it details the institutional failures in treating young girls and cites a decade of lost action from the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (IICSA), set up in 2014 to investigate grooming gangs in Rotherham. The report is also expected to link illegal immigration with the exploitation of young girls. Kemi Badenoch, the Conservative leader, said on Saturday that Sir Keir should recognise "he made a mistake and apologise for six wasted months". Speaking to Sky's Sunday Morning With Trevor Phillips, Chancellor Rachel Reeves refused to say if the government will apologise for dismissing calls for a national public inquiry into grooming gangs. 18:00 She said: "What is the most important thing here? It is the victims, and it's not people's hurt feelings about how they have been spoken about."

Fury as Labour drops cross-party talks to fix social care crisis
Fury as Labour drops cross-party talks to fix social care crisis

Telegraph

timean hour ago

  • Telegraph

Fury as Labour drops cross-party talks to fix social care crisis

Cross-party talks to solve the long-term crisis in social care funding have quietly been abandoned, The Telegraph can disclose. Wes Streeting, the Health Secretary, repeatedly stressed the importance of working with political rivals to secure consensus when he launched a review into the area in January. Failure to get cross-party backing for whatever fix Labour eventually outlines could undercut the chance of it ever being implemented, potentially prolonging the funding crisis for families across the country. A gathering with health representatives from opposition political parties had been scheduled in February but was postponed at late notice. Now it can be revealed that Baroness Casey, the Whitehall fixer tasked with leading the social care review, has scrapped plans for group cross-party talks on the issue. Instead, she has written to opposition political parties and asked them to meet her one-on-one rather than together to discuss the challenges in social care. The approach is markedly different from the one Mr Streeting publicly touted at the start of the year and has led to accusations of walking back past promises. The Conservatives and the Liberal Democrats are now demanding the cross-party talks are reinstated, warning there is the 'risk of missing the real opportunity'. Labour is already facing criticism over delays to tackle the social care crisis, which sees families facing soaring costs for elderly loved ones with little help from the state. The party fell short of a promise to spell out their solution to the challenges in its election manifesto last year and then ditched the Tory policy of a social care costs cap. Mr Steering has tasked Baroness Casey with a two-part review but proposals for a long-term solution will not come until 2028 and the peer is still stuck doing a different grooming review. When Mr Streeting announced the review in early January the press release repeatedly stressed the importance of building a 'cross-party consensus' on social care reform. Mr Streeting said in an interview at the time: 'We will have cross-party talks next month. And I'm really encouraged by the fact that since the election, the Conservatives, the Liberal Democrats and Reform have all said that they want to work across-party on this, and those talks will begin next month.' Edward Argar, the Tory shadow health secretary, said: 'The decision by the Health and Social Care Secretary to scrap the cross-party talks he'd promised, and switch to an independent commission, holding individual conversations with parties runs the risk of missing the real opportunity to make the cross-party progress this issue needs, and the British people deserve.' Rachel Reeves 's spending review allocated £4 billion extra to adult social care in 2028 compared to 2023, but councils have warned a long-term fix is needed. A spokesman for the Casey Review indicated that the cross-party talks could be revived at a future date but gave no specifics. They said: 'Baroness Casey has made initial contact with political parties and looks forward to working with them. 'She intends to initially meet party spokespeople individually to understand each party's position. She will bring colleagues from across the political divide together in due course.' A Health Department spokesman said: 'Baroness Casey's independent commission into adult social care, which started in April, will start a national conversation, build cross-party consensus and provide recommendations for a social care system that is fair and affordable for all. 'As the commission is independent, Baroness Casey and her team are taking forward arranging discussions with political parties.'

Grooming gangs will be tracked down & jailed as Keir Starmer warned of civil unrest if inquiry fails to get justice
Grooming gangs will be tracked down & jailed as Keir Starmer warned of civil unrest if inquiry fails to get justice

The Sun

timean hour ago

  • The Sun

Grooming gangs will be tracked down & jailed as Keir Starmer warned of civil unrest if inquiry fails to get justice

GROOMING gang predators will be tracked down and jailed by elite cops — with Sir Keir Starmer warned of civil unrest if his new inquiry fails to get justice. The National Crime Agency will hunt abusers whose cases have been overlooked or closed by regional police. 3 PM Sir Keir finally announced a national inquiry on Saturday, after previously allowing only five local ones. It will have the power to force investigations into historic cases of grooming gang cover-ups. Reform UK leader Nigel Farage said: 'Keir Starmer should apologise to the victims for the cynical way that he tried to avoid a proper inquiry and for his insults to those that have tried ensure the perpetrators are held to account. 'If this turns out to be a whitewash, the fury of the country will be hard to control.' Tory Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp added: 'The NCA announcement is a desperate smokescreen. Labour spent six months blocking a statutory inquiry. That is six months of delayed justice.' More than 800 cases have been reopened by police. The NCA will help cops improve investigations and end a culture of denial about the extent of the scandal. Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said: 'The vulnerable girls who suffered unimaginable abuse at the hands of groups of adult men have now grown into brave women who are rightly demanding justice for what they went through. 'Not enough people listened to them then. That was unforgivable. We are changing that.' Baroness Casey's long-awaited report is today expected to say white girls targeted were 'institutionally ignored for fear of racism'. It will also link illegal migration with the abuse. Kemi Badenoch's bid for a national inquiry into child rape gangs was tonight blocked by Labour MPs 3 TRUTH WILL BE EXPOSED AT LAST By Julie Bindel, Feminist campaigner IT is time we knew the truth about the cover-ups, and held those responsible to account. I will never forget meeting a woman called Irene Ivison in 1996. Her daughter Fiona was murdered, aged 17, three years after being targeted by a grooming gang. Irene had desperately tried to get police and social services to intervene in the 'relationship' that began when her daughter was only 14. Fiona was forced into prostitution and killed by a punter. Since then I have met countless other victims. I wrote the first piece in the national press about the scandal, in 2007. I tried to get the liberal media to notice. But, because the abusers were predominantly Pakistani Muslim, they did not want to be seen as racist. This inquiry should expose the truth once and for all. And when it does, heads should roll.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store