2 February, 2010. Office hours  Georgios Tuesdays 1-2; 4-5 (A236B)  Siim Thursday 2pm-3pm (A232) Friday 10am-11am (A232)

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Presentation transcript:

2 February, 2010

Office hours  Georgios Tuesdays 1-2; 4-5 (A236B)  Siim Thursday 2pm-3pm (A232) Friday 10am-11am (A232)

Essay Topics  Handout

Review  Institutions and electoral competition  Is there a link?

Nature and Acquisition of Opinions and Values  Rational choice  Socialization or DNA?

Nature and Acquisition of Opinions and Values  Process by which one acquires values and develops opinions is called socialization.  Agents of socialization Family and Friends School Media (news, relatively new media, soft news, entertainment) Lifetime Learning: new jobs, new friends, new neighborhoods

Nature and Acquisition of Opinions and Values (II)  Are we wired to be a liberal or conservative?  Twin Studies identical twins were more likely to agree on political issues than were fraternal twins. Taxes - (four-fifths of identical twins shared the same opinion, while only two-thirds of fraternal twins agreed).

Mean Placement of Ideological Beliefs by Country

Ideology by Voter Participation Source: British Election Study, 2005

Gender and Ideology BritainUnited States Source: British Election Study, 2005 and American National Election Study, 2008

Age and Ideology BritainUnited States Source: British Election Study, 2005 and American National Electoin Study, 2008

Social Group Basis of Ideology (United States) Source: Center for American ProgressCenter for American Progress

The United States as an outlier Percentage saying they “completely agree” with the following statement: “It is the responsibility of the state to take care of very poor people who can’t take care of themselves”

Attitudes about Taxes and Spending Source: British Election Study, 2005

Opinions on Issues Source: British Election Study, 2005

Political Engagement

Source: British Election Study, 2005

Ideology and the Vote Source: British Election Study, 2005

The concept of Party Identification  Psychological attachment to parties  Perceptual screen  Habitual attachment to parties that carries over into voting, ie. “party loyalists”  Party labels serve as a “cue” or “short cut” for voting particularly in low information elections.

Measuring Party identification in Canada  In federal politics, do you usually think of yourself as a Liberal, Conservative, N.D.P., Reform, Bloc Quebecois, or none of these?  How strongly (Liberal, Conservative,N.D.P., Reform, Bloc Quebecois) do you feel, very strongly, fairly strongly,or not very strongly?  Do you generally think of yourself as being a little closer to one of the federal parties than the others?  Which party is that?

Measuring Party Identification in the US  “Generally speaking, do you usually think of yourself as a Republican, a Democrat, and Independent, or what?”  Persons who call themselves Republicans or Democrats are then asked: “Would you call yourself a strong (Republican, Democrat) or a not very strong (Republican, Democrat).  Persons who call themselves Independents, answer “no preference,” or name another party are asked : “Do you think of yourself as closer to the Republican or to the Democratic party?”

Measuring Party identification in Britain  Generally speaking,do you think of yourself as Conservative, Labour, Liberal Democrat, Scottish Nationalist Party,Plaid Cymru, Green Party, or what?  Do you generally think of yourself as a little closer to one of the parties than the others? IF YES, which party?  Would you call yourself very strong (Conservative,Labour,Liberal Democrat, Scottish Nationalist Party,Plaid Cymru,Green Party),fairly strong, or not very strong?

Ideology and Partisanship

Changes in Party Id (Britain)

Social Class and Party Identification,

Trend in Labour Partisanship, April 2004 – March 2008

Trends in Partisanship ( )

Party Identification and Leadership Evaluations

Party id and the Vote (Britain)

Implications - Polarization  Electoral competition in the United States now appears to be structured by ideology  The American public appears to be increasingly divided into two groups: the politically engaged, who view politics in ideological terms, and the politically disengaged, who do not.  In contrast, ideology in Britain is less of factor. Electoral competition is structured around “valence issues” rather than policy differences.