A poll from 2008 showed that 50% of respondents do not approve abortion in the case in which a couple does not want more children. That was increased opposition compared to the same poll from 1999, when only 40% opposed. However, this poll was criticized by some for being suggestive. In 2011,
Bishop of Krk Valter Župan publicly called for abortion to be banned. In response,
Nova TV had an opinion poll conducted, in which 67% of respondents in Croatia said they believe that the current abortion law should not be changed, while 23% supported a ban on abortions. Support for a ban was higher among women, and in the regions of
Slavonia and
Dalmatia. According to another survey in 2013, which was conducted among 1,500 young people in Croatia (between ages 14 and 27), 38.9% of the respondents said it should be legal, 28.7% said only medically warranted abortions should be allowed, 20.0% were unsure, and 12.4% said that abortion should be completely illegal. At the same time, more than half of the respondents did not advocate
sexual abstinence. This discrepancy was likely the result of a confusion among the young people caused by the opinions of the
Catholic Church and their own sexual needs that arise well before they are ready to enter marriage. A survey from 2014 showed that 18% of respondents "strongly support" the
right to abortion and 16.8% "tend to support". In the same time, 24.7% said they were "strongly opposed" and 14.5% "tend to oppose". 24.9% said they were indifferent on the issue. In a
Pew Research poll from 2017, 60% of Croatian respondents believed that abortion should be legal in all/most cases, while 37% said it should be illegal in all/most cases. In 2020, Ipsos Plus agency conducted a poll in which 81% of respondents agreed with the statement that a woman should have a right to choose regarding pregnancies, giving birth or abortions, of which 68% completely agreed and 13% mostly agreed. ==References==