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Public Opinion Types of publics I. Elites A. Those with disproportionate amount of political resources 1. a. 2. 3. B. C. What is a political resource? Raise issues and help set national agenda Influence resolution of issues Attentive: those with an active interest in govt./politics Mass: those with little interest in govt./politics Types of opinions II. Stable: change very little A. A. Death penalty Fluid: change frequently B. A. President popularity (approval rating) Latent: dormant, but may be aroused C. A. Military draft Salient: has personal importance to individuals D. A. Brady and gun control Consensus: shared by 75% of the people or more E. A. Having a balanced budget Polarized: shared by less than 75% F. A. B. Gun control Gay marriage Intensity: the strength of, or passion behind, an opinion G. A. People tend to have intense opinions on issues such as abortion, gay rights and capital punishment Measurement of public opinion III. A. B. Elections: deceiving – does not tell WHY people voted as they did Straw polls: unbinding, unofficial opinion poll, used to predict outcome (elections, support for a bill) C. Scientific polls 1. Construction a. b. c. d. Definition of universe (also called population): population to be measured Selection of sampling 1) Random sample: each person in the sample (the smaller representative number actually polled) has equal chance of being selected 2) Sampling error (errors in data due to the fact of sampling) expressed in +/- numbers (+/-5%), called margins of error. To achieve a margin of error of +/-3%, must poll 1,000 people. 500-1,000 often used for political polls (cost prohibits lower sampling errors) 3) The greater number of respondents, the lower the margin of error Selection of means (how will the data be gathered?) 1. Most popular: computer-generated phone list Writing the question (avoiding bias) Do you think there should be an amendment to the Constitution prohibiting abortions, or shouldn't there be such an amendment? (29/67 should/shouldn’t) Do you believe there should be an amendment to the constitution protecting the life of the unborn child, or shouldn't there be such an amendment? (50/39) Are your opinions about abortion more in line with the pro-life philosophy or the pro-abortion philosophy? Do you think there should be a Constitutional amendment removing the electoral college in order to prevent another sitting president from stealing the election? Do you want to stop the war in Iraq so the lives of innocent civilians can be spared? 1. 2. Do you believe that women have had a history in the United States of oppression by the male power structure? Do believe women should have the right to decide for themselves whether or not an abortion is right for them? Leading questions Interpretation problems: Do you support military action to unseat the Islamic fundamentalist regime of Iran (Yes | No | Unsure)? The raw data result may be: 29 percent support, 28 percent oppose, 43 percent unsure. The correct conclusion: The public generally hasn't made up its mind or needs more information. However, a biased reporter may selectively draw from the results and give the wrong impression as in the following report: “The idea of military action against Iran is increasingly unpopular. A recent poll concluded that only 29 percent support action.” D. E. Push polls: political propaganda disguised as polls. Automated phone calls asking for polling information that then launches a political attack against an opponent Advocacy polls: legitimate polls that are, nonetheless, inaccurate in that they tend to ignore damaging data, and publicize only the collected data that supports their cause F. Uses of polls a. b. c. d. G. Informing public Informing candidates Informing office-holders Making election night projections through use of exit polls Abuses of polls a. b. c. “Horse race” mentality emphasized during campaigns at expense of issues Pandering to whims of public by candidates and office-holders Early projections from exit polls may discourage voter turnout, esp. in West (“It’s already lost (or won), why bother!”) a. 2000 Election demonstrated exit poll problems b. Early projections in Florida discouraged turnout in panhandle c. Flawed data led to flawed projections d. Network news declared Al Gore the victor, recanted, declared Bush the winner, then recanted again, only to finally call the election for Bush once again, making for a very confusing night! Public Awareness and interest in politics IV. Mass public pays little attention to politics Surveys also show substantial lack of political knowledge by the public A. B. 1. 2. Cant identify public figures (Nancy Pelosi, Barbara Boxer, Diane Feinstein) Can’t identify key issues (in 1982, after years of debate, 1/3 of adults indicated they had never heard of ERA) Questions 1. 2. 3. 4. What is the difference between the “attentive” and “mass” publics? 2. Explain a polarized opinion: Explain the numbers behind this comment: “It seems the public has reached a consensus on healthcare reform.” How is a scientific poll conducted?