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AP GOVERNMENT. PUBLIC OPINION Chapter 5. PUBLIC OPINION. The aggregate of individual attitudes or beliefs by some portion of the adult population No ONE public opinion Consensus Opinion – majority portion of the public expresses the same view.
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AP GOVERNMENT PUBLIC OPINION Chapter 5
PUBLIC OPINION • The aggregate of individual attitudes or beliefs by some portion of the adult population • No ONE public opinion • Consensus Opinion – majority portion of the public expresses the same view
Divisive Opinion - when the public holds widely differing attitudes • John Q Public – average man or woman on the street • Middle America – (Kraft, 1968) refers to Americans not in poverty but not yet affluent & hold traditional middle class values • Silent Majority – people w/traditional values (against counterculture)
What Shapes Our Public Opinions? • FAMILY – the majority of young people identify with their parents’ political party Most important factor! • Table 5.1
When do we acquire our political knowledge? • Preschool – ideas of authority and rules • Elementary School – concept of govt as an institution AND political figures portrayed as honest and benevolent
Adolescence – Begin to identify with a political party (can id w/liberal and conservative) • Adulthood – generally no change in political beliefs • Major life change could change beliefs
Other Factors that Shape our PO… • Religion – for 2 reasons: • The social status of a religion (Catholics and Jews were often poor immigrants and ∴ are more liberal) • Religious Tradition (Protestants emphasize personal salvation ∴ are more conservative)
Other Factors continue… • Gender More women identify with the liberal view (Democratic) Figure 5.1 The gender gap is the difference in political views between men and women (Table 5.3)
Other Factors continue… • Schooling – College students are more liberal than the general population More schooling increases the rate at which people participate in politics WHY? 3 reasons on page 110
Middle age or older White Highly educated Outside the South Male Married White Collared Job Long time residents Wealthy People more likely to vote…
SOCIAL CLASS • Has changed over the decades • EX. Occupation - Professionals – conservative in 50s but more liberal in 60s
What has remained constant? • Unskilled workers tend to be more Democratic • ↑in higher educational degrees favors Democrats (16 points gained)
RACE and ETHNICITY • African Americans – Democratic • Whites – Republican • Are the differences narrowing? • Younger AAs more likely to be Republican (26%) Table 5.6 (but is that trend changing with the election of Obama?) • Differing views b/t leaders and AA citizens
Most Latinos are Democratic • Except Cubans – Republican • Mexican – most Democratic • Asians more Republican • Japanese most conservative • Koreans more liberal
REGIONAL DIFFERENCES • Southerners more conservative (social issues) • Table 5.8 (only white Protestants) • Pro business (less so to organized labor) • Less Democratic (Dixiecrats)
Political Ideology • Liberal v. Conservative • Either has a patterned of set beliefs about how govt should operate • TWO MAIN CATEGORIES • Economics and Personal Conduct
Measuring Political Ideology… • Self labeling • How accurate your ideology is based on your views on particular subjects
Most Americans are moderates Then Conservatives Last Liberals
Changes in the Definitions… • Early 1800’s, liberalism meant personal and economic freedom from the state • Conservatives favored restoration of the state (more govt control) • FDR – liberal referred to active govt
DEFINE THE FOLLOWING: • Pure Liberal • Pure Conservative • Libertarian • Populist • Political Elite (activists)
INCONSISTENCIES in Public Opinions • 1992-President George Bush • Presidential Approval rating at a low (<40%) • Disapproval of Congress (about 80%) • Pride in being American over 90% • Belief in democracy over 60%
Public Opinion Polling • Sampling must be representative and random • Complete list of all available people • Selection of a random # to be interviewed • Equal chance of being chosen
DIVISION OF U.S. • Division of nation into regions • Regions into subregions • Select several subregions in each region • Random sample of each subregion • Random # phone callers • Every X # of houses
Sampling Error • Difference between sample and entire population Margin of Error • Accuracy of poll increases when the # polled increases
Other Inaccuracies • Type of Questions • Emotional-loaded questions (please the interviewer) • Differences in wording • Respondents’ truthfulness
Push Polling • Given misleading information in the questions • To vote AGAINST a particular candidate
Opinions of Various Groups • Gender differences • Health for women, defense for men • Age differences • Less military-conscious at younger age
Class differences • Education and income gap • Poorer-gov’t assistance • Middle to upper class-support civil liberties
Regional differences • South-strong military • South-prayer in school • White southerners-minimum support for civil rights
Racial differences • Race gap • OJ Simpson (divisive opinions) • Civil Rights support • More than Million Man March • Criticizing the Katrina Efforts • % of AA who voted for Obama v. % of all Americans who voted for Obama