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Influencing Government. Public Opinion The Mass Media Interest Groups. Public Opinion. Forming Public Opinion Public Opinion is ideas and attitudes that most people hold about elected officials Public opinion shapes the decisions of elected officials Where Public Opinion Comes From
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Influencing Government Public Opinion The Mass Media Interest Groups
Public Opinion Forming Public Opinion • Public Opinion is ideas and attitudes that most people hold about elected officials • Public opinion shapes the decisions of elected officials Where Public Opinion Comes From • Personal background-Age, gender, race, religion, occupation, hometown • Mass Media- TV, radio, newspapers, magazines, movies, books • Public Officials- Candidates share opinions in speeches and articles • Interest Groups- People unite who share a common view • IG’s try to persuade people toward their view
Public Opinion Components of Public Opinion • Direction- Is public opinion on a topic negative or positive • Intensity- The strength of an opinion on an issue • Stability- How firmly people hold their opinions are important
Public Opinion Measuring Public Opinion • Look at election results not reliable (ppl vote for different reasons) • Take a public opinion poll- survey • Candidates and current presidents hire people to ask citizens how they feel about issuespollsters • Use random sample of citizens (1500/poll) • Critics of polling say officials are more concerned with being popular than leading • Our Founding Fathers tried to create a system that would represent the people, but still keep politicians isolated from the “whims” of the public
The Mass Media Types of Media • Provide link between the people and elected officials • Print Media: newspapers, magazines, books • Electronic Media: Radio, television, Internet • TV stations are privately owned businesses- they choose what to cover • Most in depth info comes from print media
The Mass Media The Media’s Impact on Politics and Government • The issues that receive the most time, money and effort from gov’t make up the public agenda • Media influence what becomes public agenda • Since TV, ppl. just on TV, without political experience can run for office (Steven Colbert) • Elected officials and the press need each othereach relies on the other for exposure • Officials use the press to “leak” new ideas and infotest the public • Media acts as a “watchdog”- looking over gov’t activities (Former Senator Edwards “lovechild”) • Press walks a fine line between reporting news and threatening national security
The Mass Media Protecting the Media • First Amendment protects freedom of press • Gov’t promises freedom from prior restraint- freedom from gov’t criticism before it is published • No one is free to publish false infolibel • Gov’t regulates media through FCC- Federal Communications Committee
Interest Groups Types of Interest Groups • Interest groups are groups of people who share a point of view and unite to promote their viewpoints • IG’s are biased support a particular viewpoint • A person can belong to many interest groups at one time
Interest Groups 3 types of Interest Groups 1. Economic Interest Groups • Largest types • Protect large companies, labor unions • AFL-CIO • Professional groups (lawyers, doctors) 2. Public Interest Group • Some groups form to benefit all of society • Common Cause Group: pollution, homelessness 3. Other Interest Group • Groups form to protect ethnic group, age group, or gender • NAACP, AARP • Groups covering special causes- National Wildlife Federation
Interest Groups Influencing Government • Interest groups are important because they influence public policy course of action gov’t takes in response to an issue or problem • IG’s influence public policy by taking certain issues to court • IG’s hire lobbyistsrepresentatives for an IG by contacting public officials directly • Lobbyists are sometimes hired, sometimes volunteers
Interest Groups Techniques of Interest Groups • Print and Media adsMilk, pork, US made products • Use propaganda to reach society • Endorsements • Stacked Cards • Name Calling • Just Plain Folks Regulation of Interest Groups • 1946 law requires lobbyists to register • Time limit between gov’t official and lobbyist • Critics say PACs and lobbyists influence too much