Those are good points with regards to gay marriage and the death penalty. Abortion simply isn't going anywhere regardless of what the pro-choice like to make people believe. It is in the Constitution and that is pretty much that. I am sure Canadians have a pro-life movement as well.
I saw some of the threads on the Death Penalty and it seems like there are quite a few who want it up there. They may be in the minority but not by much.
But my state here, Massachusetts, is about as left and liberal as you can get. Sure we sent a Republican to the Senate and that was more because of his opponent's arrogance and sense of entitlement that showed throughout the campaign. She was already picking out her curtains down in D.C. He'll have to fight for that seat each time he is up for re-election. He is not a sure thing to win as Kennedy was. Most of our state reps are Democrats and liberal.
Canada has a sizable number of people who share similar opinions on the Death Penalty, Gay Marriage, Abortion etc... it's not really a political issue anymore though. If a political party runs a platform on any of those 3, it pretty much ensures their defeat.
John Tory, a conservative politician from Ontario pretty much sunk his campaign a few years back because he made funding of religious based schools one of his platforms. That didn't sit too well with the population and he was subsequently spanked by his liberal opponent.