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Notes -
The PEW survey you cited is a start. Here's another, more recent one: https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2022/11/15/about-six-in-ten-americans-say-legalization-of-same-sex-marriage-is-good-for-society/
GOP: 55/43 against/for
Conservative GOP: 66/32 against/for
Black: 39/57 against/for
So a 14 point gap for African Americans vs the GOP as a whole and a 25 point gap compared to conservative Republicans, both of the latter being net negative. Conversely, there's a 23 point gap between them and Democrats. So yes, African Americans are more conservative on homosexuality than Democrats as a whole but less than Republicans.
I'm not going to try and read minds to determine whether or not people really mean what they say, but a) conservative politicians generally continue to oppose legalization of gay marriage b) black politicians generally do not c) at least some conservative politicians continue to actively and vocally oppose gay rights and present the toleration of homosexuality as a social threat.
This is motivated by a minority of religious conservatives, but I'd argue that points in favor of anti-gay sentiment as litmus for far right political alignment - more 'normal' conservatives might not think much of homosexuality and are happy to go along with their more proactive copartisans, but it doesn't motivate their politics and they're generally not enthused about burning political capital for it. Contrast that with where the Overton Window was on the matter 15 years ago - the 'moderate' position was civil unions and the broader question of cultural acceptance wasn't really on the table.
It's a shame I can only upvote this once; thank you.
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