Public Opinion - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Public Opinion

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Public Opinion The distribution of the population s beliefs about politics and policy issues Demography The science of population changes Census – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Public Opinion


1
Introduction
  • Public Opinion
  • The distribution of the populations beliefs
    about politics and policy issues
  • Demography
  • The science of population changes
  • Census
  • A valuable tool for understanding population
    changes
  • Required every 10 years by the Constitution

2
The American People
  • The Immigrant Society
  • United States is a nation of immigrants.
  • Three waves of immigration
  • Northwestern Europeans (prior to late 19th
    Century)
  • Southern and eastern Europeans (late 19th and
    early 20th centuries)
  • Hispanics and Asians (late 20th century)

3
The American People
  • The American Melting Pot
  • Melting Pot the mixing of cultures, ideas, and
    peoples that has changed the American nation
  • Minority Majority the emergence of a
    non-Caucasian majority
  • Political culture is an overall set of values
    widely shared within a society.

4
The American People
5
The American People
  • The American Melting Pot (continued)
  • African Americans face a legacy of racism.
  • Hispanics are the largest minority group faced
    with the problem of illegal immigration.
  • Simpson-Mazzoli Act requires employers document
    citizenship of employee
  • Asian immigration has been driven by a new class
    of professional workers.
  • Native Americans indigenous and disadvantaged

6
The American People
  • The Regional Shift
  • Population shift from east to west
  • Reapportionment the process of reallocating
    seats in the House of Representatives every 10
    years on the basis of the results of the census.

7
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8
The American People
  • The Graying of America
  • Fastest growing age group is over 65
  • Potential drain on Social Security
  • Pay as you go system
  • In 1942, 42 workers per retiree
  • In 2040, 2 workers per retiree

9
How Americans Learn About Politics Political
Socialization
  • Political Socialization
  • the process through which and individual
    acquires their particular political
    orientation (Richard Dawson)
  • Orientation grows firmer with age
  • The Process of Political Socialization
  • The Family Political leanings of children often
    mirror their parents leanings

10
Agents of Socialization
Churches
Family
Schools
Peers
Political and Community Leaders
The Media
11
How Americans Learn About Politics Political
Socialization
12
How Americans Learn About Politics Political
Socialization
  • The Process of Political Socialization
    (continued)
  • The Mass Media
  • Chief source of information as children age
  • Generation gap is viewing television news
  • School
  • Used by government to socialize young into
    political culture
  • Better-educated citizens are more likely to vote
    and are more knowledgeable about politics and
    policy.

13
How American Learn About Politics Political
Socialization
  • Political Learning Over a Lifetime
  • Aging increases political participation and
    strength of party attachment.

14
What Americans Think about Politics
15
What Americans Think about Politics
16
Measuring Public Opinion and Political Information
  • How Polls Are Conducted
  • Sample a small proportion of people who are
    chosen in a survey to be representative of the
    whole
  • Random Sampling the key technique employed by
    sophisticated survey researchers which operates
    on the principle that everyone should have an
    equal probability of being selected for the
    sample
  • Stratified Sampling A process of random
    sampling in which the national population is
    divided into fourths representative counties and
    metropolitan statistical areas are selected as
    representative of the national population.
  • Sampling Error the level of confidence in the
    findings of a public opinion poll

17
Measuring Public Opinion and Political Information
  • The Role of Polls in American Democracy
  • Polls help politicians detect public preferences.
  • But critics say polls make politicians think more
    about following than leading public
  • Even though politicians do not track opinion to
    make policy
  • Question wording may affect survey results

18
Measuring Public Opinion and Political Information
  • The Role of Polls in American Democracy
  • Polls may distort election process
  • Exit Polls used by the media to predict election
    day winners
  • May discourage people from voting
  • 2000 presidential election in Florida

19
Measuring Public Opinion and Political Information
  • What Polls Reveal About Americans Political
    Information
  • Americans dont know much about politics.
  • Americans may know their basic beliefs but not
    how that affects policies of the government.
  • The Decline of Trust in Government
  • Since 1964, trust in government has declined.
  • Trust in government has gone up for a short time
    after September 11.

20
Measuring Public Opinion and Political Information
21
Measuring Public Opinion and Political Information
22
What Americans Value Political Ideologies
  • Political Ideology
  • A coherent set of beliefs about politics, public
    policy, and public purpose
  • Who Are the Liberals and Conservatives?
  • Predominance of conservative over liberal
    thinking
  • Currently about 38 conservative, 24 liberal,
    38 moderate
  • Gender gap women tend to be less conservative
    than men
  • Ideological variation by religion too

23
What Americans Value Political Ideologies
24
What Americans Value Political Ideologies
  • Do People Think in Ideological Terms?
  • Ideologues think in ideological terms
  • Group Benefits voters view politics through
    party or group label
  • Nature of the Times view of politics based on
    whether times are good or bad
  • No issue content vote routinely for party or
    personality

25
How Americans Participate in Politics
  • Political Participation all the activities used
    by citizens to influence the selection of
    political leaders or the policies they pursue
  • Conventional Participation
  • Voting in elections
  • Working in campaigns or running for office
  • Contacting elected officials

26
How Americans Participate in Politics
  • Protest as Participation
  • Protest a form of political participation
    designed to achieve policy changes through
    dramatic and unconventional tactics
  • Civil disobedience a form of political
    participation that reflects a conscious decision
    to break a law believed to be immoral and to
    suffer the consequences

27
How Americans Participate in Politics
  • Class, Inequality, and Participation

28
Understanding Public Opinion and Political Action
  • Public Attitudes Toward the Scope of Government
  • Many people have no opinion about scope of
    government.
  • Public opinion is inconsistent, which may lead to
    policy gridlock.
  • Democracy, Public Opinion, and Political Action
  • Americans select leaders, but do they do so
    wisely?
  • If people know little about candidates issues,
    how can they effectively take part in the
    political process?
  • People vote more for performance than policy.

29
Summary
  • American society is ethnically diverse and
    changing.
  • Knowing public opinion is important to a
    democracy, just as polling has costs and
    benefits.
  • Americans know little about politics.
  • Political participation is generally low.
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