Nearly 24% of Americans would “tend to support” or “strongly support” their states’ independence from the United States, according to a new Reuters poll.
That isn’t necessarily a change from past polling, but it is timely: Various news outlets have used the story of Scotland’s near-secession from the United Kingdom to discuss the prospects for state-level secession in the United States. After all, the best way to sell a foreign policy story is to turn it into a domestic affairs story.
While the poll is getting additional attention thanks to the Scottish referendum, its results are not markedly different from what’s come before. Last year, Rasmussen found that 17% of American adults would vote for secession, and 22% believe that states have the right to secede on principle. A 2012 HuffPost/YouGov poll found that 22% of Americans were in favor of seceding, while a 2008 Middlebury Institute/Zogby poll put the number at 18%.
PHOTO ESSAY: A huge moment in Scottish history
The latest Reuters poll found that those who favored secession were most often motivated by anger and dissatisfaction with the federal government. One respondent, North Carolina resident Brittany Royal, informed pollsters that the Affordable Care Act tempted her to favor seceding.
“That has really hurt a lot of people here, myself included. My insurance went from $40 a week for a family of four up to over $600 a month for a family of four,” she said.









