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Unit 5 - Public Opinion & Ideology. Targets 5.5 – 5.8. Public Opinion Case Study. Should “final clubs”, such as those at Harvard University be allowed to Continue?. Allowed. Not Allowed. Public Opinion Case Study.
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Unit 5 - Public Opinion & Ideology Targets 5.5 – 5.8
Public Opinion Case Study • Should “final clubs”, such as those at Harvard University be allowed to Continue? Allowed Not Allowed
Public Opinion Case Study • Does it seem possible or does it seem impossible to you that the Holocaust never happened? Possible Impossible
Public Opinion Case Study • Was President elect Donald Trump right to make a courtesy call to Taiwan’s political leader? Yes No
Public Opinion Case Study • Does it seem possible or does it seem impossibleto you that the Holocaust never happened? Possible 22% Impossible
5.5 Case Study - Public Opinion • Can we trust public opinion polls? • The 1993 Roper poll caused a shock wave when over 1/5 (22%) of respondents indicated that they believed it was possible the Holocaust did not happen. The question contained a double negative • By changing the wording of the question, the number dropped to just 1%
5.5 Deciphering Public Opinion • RESOURCES • How Exit Polls Work (Vox – Nov. 2014) • http://www.vox.com/2014/11/4/7150019/exit-polls-2014-midterm-election-results-biased • Fox News broke exit polls rules (Politico – Oct. 2014) • http://www.politico.com/blogs/media/2014/11/fox-news-breaks-exit-poll-rules-198174.html • 5a Should government care what the public thinks or wants? • In a democracy, how important is it for government actions to reflect the popular will? • View of the Framers? • 5b Why is public opinion so hard to pin down? • Public uniformed • Public opinion changes • Polling Techniques: Question wording matters (false positives, leading questions, either/or questions), Must be Random / Large sampling • Push polls … loaded or manipulative questions
5.5 Deciphering Public Opinion • 5c What factors influence political beliefs? • Family • Age • Religion • Gender • Social Class • Race • Region
Understanding Government To Understand … One Must Understand… Modern Government Political Parties Political Ideology Political parties Political ideology/Culture Political Issues
5.6a Political Ideology/Beliefs • Q:What distinguishes a Democrat from a Republican? • A: Political ideology = • Beliefs and/or convictions regarding political & moral issues • Q: What are the major political ideologies / labels… • A: Liberaland Conservative • Meanings have changed • Liberal for T. Jefferson = maximum political and economic freedom • Time of Roosevelt’s New Deal = Activist government that tries to solve social and economic problems • Those in the middle of the spectrum are called moderates • As a rule, the Democrats are liberal and the Republicans are conservative.
5.6b Political Ideology/Beliefs • Debating Issues • Are people born gay? • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2xXThqohiZo • Q: What do the labels “liberal” and “conservative” mean? • A: Beliefs on a wide spectrum of issues, ranging from the environment to gay marriage • Issues can be categorized as economic issues or social issues • “Hot button” Issues • Abortion • Gay Marriage • Gun Control • Illegal Immigration • National debt
5.6b Political Ideology/Beliefs • Religion in Schools • Evolution v. Intelligent Design • Evolution • The Environment • Global Waba?? • Inconvenient Truth • Wolf release program
5.6c Measuring Political Ideology • Resources: • Every wondered the origins of the terms conservative and liberal? Listen to NPR story on origins of political labels: • http://www.npr.org/2013/12/03/248320213/upset-over-divisive-political-culture-blame-burke-and-paine • Q: What tool is used to measure ideology? • A: The Political Spectrum liberals conservatives moderates Pure Liberals Pure Conservatives The Left The Right Origins of Political Ideology(NPR – Dec 2013) Left vs Right (Prauger)
5.6c Gauging Political Ideology • Liberal
5.6c Gauging Political Ideology • Conservative
5.6d Interpreting Data • Are more Americans Conservative, Liberal or Moderate? How does this correspond with party affiliation? • Interpret two charts from Pew Research: One showing Ideology (Gallup) and the other showing party affiliation (Pew) • What is the trend for each chart? • When comparing the two, do you see any anomalies? • How might we explain this?
5.6 Activity - Gauging Your Own Ideology • Complete this activity by taking 2 of the following surveys… • World’s Smallest Political Quiz • & • Go to Quiz - Or - • Pew Research – Political Typology
IN DEPTH • Ron Paul Highlights from 2012 Republican Primary Debate - (Fox News - 2011) • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kNfruyVGOe0 5.6e Beyond Conservative & Liberal • Libertarian • Demographics = younger, more educated • Social Issues = Liberal • Economic Issues = Conservative
5.6e Beyond Conservative & Liberal What do Populists Believe? http://www.npr.org/2014/10/31/360300838/in-swing-state-of-colorado-voter-says-she-has-to-settle-for-choice-of-evils • Populists • Demographics = Older, less educated • Social Issues = Conservative • Economic Issues = Liberal Capitalism, A Love Story
5.6e Beyond Conservative & Liberal Who are Evangelicals? (NPR) http://www.npr.org/2015/12/19/458058251/are-you-an-evangelical-are-you-sure • Other Labels • Environmentalists • Feminist • Mormon Feminists • Atheists • Agnostics • Evangelicals (NPR) • Fundamentalist
5.7 Q: “Who” are Liberals & Conservatives? • A: Many factors shape, or otherwise correlate with an individuals ideological beliefs. The following are some important demographic factors: • Gender • Race • Age • Region • Southern states v. North East • West coast v. Intermountain region • Urban v. Rural • Religion • Church goers v. secularists • Education • Income • Family (married?, Children?)
5.7 In Depth - Who are liberals & Conservatives RESOURCES How do Exit Polls work? http://www.vox.com/2014/11/4/7150019/exit-polls-2014-midterm-election-results-biased • Complete this In depth Assignment by using CNN Exit Polls • 2012 Presidential Exit Polls (CNN) • Once at the web site, choose the exit poll tab • 2014 Mid term exit polls (CNN) • Once at the web site, scroll down below the map, then choose the "Exit Poll" tab • 2016 Presidential Exit Poll (CNN) • Example of how to complete 5.7: • View of Federal Health Law (Obamacare) – 2014 exit polls • Conservatives are much more likely to oppose Obamacare at 84%, whereas liberals are much more likely to favor at 74% • In your answer, use the phrases “more likely” & “less likely” to record the trend • Optional Polls to look at (Note that some categories are not included in these polls) • 2012 Exit Polls (NY Times) • 2012 Exit Polls (Wash. Post) Compares 2012 & 2008 Elections • How do Exit polls Work? (VoxArticle)
Religion cont. Democrats and Religion
5.8 Political Elites • 8a-c Who Are Political Elites? • Political Elites defined…. • Elites are more consistent and more extreme in their political views • Elites are more ideological than the general public (Pew) • Through what means do political elites exercise more influence over policy? • Media • Examples
5.9 Reading Data • The AP test will have questions that will include charts and data • Use the Charts and Data handout/online presentation to complete this target