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• Thursday, November 26th, 2009

NEW YORK (Reuters) – New Jersey voters are divided over the legalization of gay marriage, but now more people opposed to the support, are doing a survey released Wednesday.

Survey found that voters by Quinnipiac University, 49 percent of permission to marry a lesbian couple oppose the legislation, while 46 percent support such laws, found 49 percent supported reversing April’s elections and 43 percent opposed.

“When asked in April about gay marriage, narrowly approved. Achieved that now looks more like a legislative vote, the people,” Maurice Carroll, Quinnipiac University polling institute’s director, said that along with the lost was.

New Jersey Democratic Gov. If a bill passed by the legislature for Jon Corzine before his term ends in January signed promised. Gay marriage losing re-election this month, Corzine’s Republican Chris Christie to fight against.

But it not clear that New Jersey, which already, same sex civil union law permits manufacturers to issue a vote is taken. In marriages of couples the same rights as married couples pay more – with insurance coverage, tax benefits and hospital visitation rights.

New Jersey voters in 1615 Quinnipiac poll between November 17 and 22 November, or 2.4 percentage points more than the margin of error is zero.

Five U.S. states legal gay marriage – Iowa Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Hampshire and Vermont – the voters, but the first season in the state this month, Maine, chose to repeal a law.

About 40 U.S. states have laws ban gay marriage.

President Barack Obama recently Human Rights Campaign, a gay advocacy group dinner given by the standing ovation that they live to fight for their cause and for gay service in the army renewed pledge to end the ban.

However, many gay activists complain that some gay rights back Obama canceled his rhetoric not protect marriage, including the Act, which prohibits the federal government has forced states to recognize gay marriage.

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