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Chapter 6 Public Opinion, Political Socialization and Media
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Public Opinion Aggregate of individual attitudes or beliefs shared by some portion of adult population No one public opinion; many different “publics” Key role in policymaking Source of power Helps candidates identify issues Sets limits on government action through public pressure
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Measuring Public Opinion Opinion poll = method of systematically questioning small, selected sample of respondents deemed representative of total population Simple random sample = each member of population has equal chance of being selected for sample Most scientific; sample represents population’s diversity in demography and opinion
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Problems with Polls “Snapshot in time” Classic errors: presidential election polls (1948, Dewey beating Truman; 1980, Carter beating Reagan) Sampling errors (e.g., biased samples, samples too small, etc.) Question wording/influence of interviewer Unscientific polls (Internet, phone-in, push polls) High non-response rates
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Political Socialization Process by which individuals acquire political beliefs, attitudes, and opinions Agents/forces Family Education Peers Religion Economic Status/occupation/class Political Events Opinion Leaders Media/TV/Internet Demography/Age/Gender
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Family Most important agent Communication and Receptivity Parents communicate preferences to children To please parents children receptive to their views Important for party identification Class poll: How many of us have followed in our parents’ footsteps when it comes to party identification?
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Education and Peers Education patriotism, structure of government, how to form positions on issues more education, more likely interested in politics Peers most likely to shape political opinions when peer group is politically active
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Religion Traditional view definite effect Roman Catholics more liberal Protestants more conservative Jews more liberal More recent trends Non-religious very liberal socially; mixed economically Protestants and Catholics vary socially and economically Social conservatism among Christians Degree of religious commitment Conservative, evangelical, or fundamentalist
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SES/Class Income strong predictor of liberalism or conservatism Lower income More likely to favor government action, benefit poor, promote economic equality More likely to be socially conservative More likely to be Democrat Less likely to participate Higher income More likely to oppose government action or economic equality More likely to be socially liberal More likely to be Republican or Libertarian More likely to participate Socioeconomic status (SES) = best predictor of participation
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Political Events Can shape people’s political attitudes Generational effect = long-lasting effect of events of particular time on political opinions of those who came of age at that time Great Depression World War II Vietnam War 9/11?
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Media Media = channels of mass communication Newspapers, television, radio and Internet strongly influence public opinion Certainly what to think about, known as agenda setting Mainly private, for-profit corporations
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Demography Region South, Great Plains, and Rockies Republican West Coast and Northeast Democratic Residence (urban/suburban/rural) Big cities liberal and Democratic Small communities conservative and Republican Ethnicity African Americans more liberal Whites more conservative Gender Men more likely to vote Republican Women more likely to vote Democratic
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Political Process Public opinion Source of power Identify key issues Shape campaigns Political culture = collection of beliefs and attitudes toward government and political process Symbols and shared beliefs Provides environment of support (trust, legitimacy) Political trust = degree of trust in government and political institutions Standard for evaluation of performance
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Media and Politics Functions of Media Entertainment Reporting news Identifying public problems Setting public agenda = issues perceived by political community as meriting public attention and governmental action Socializing generations Providing political forum Making profits Enormous impact on politics
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Television Most influential medium (primary source for 90% of Americans) Big business Increase in news-type programming Influence on political process Highly superficial, “Sound bites” Narrowcasting
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Media and Campaigns Advertising (very costly campaigns) Negative advertising works Reduces participation, increases cynicism Management of news coverage spin = interpretation favorable to candidate’s campaign spin doctors = campaign tries to convince journalists of truth of favorable interpretation
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