Title: What Affects Voter Choice
1What Affects Voter Choice?
- Demographics?
- Ideology?
- To some extent, but not as much anymore.
- 1) people are not very ideologically consistent
- 2) not a lot of true ideological variance in the
American system. - Partisanship?
- Yes, but increasingly a less powerful an affect
w/ the rise of independents and direct techology - Image of Candidate?
- Issues /Record ?
2Ideology Defined
- Ideology is a value system or belief system
accepted as fact or truth by some group. An
ideology provides the believer with a picture of
the world both as it is and as it should be, and
in doing so, organizes the tremendous complexity
of the world into something fairly simple and
understandable
3Political Ideology
- In its simplest formulation, an ideology that
focuses on the political. It relates to the
beliefs of a group or an individual.
4Modern Political Ideologies
- Conservatives--are defined as individuals who
emphasize the market place as a means of
distributing economic benefits but look to
government to uphold traditional social values.
5Modern Political Ideologies
- liberals--favor activist government as an
instrument to promote equality or widely
distribute economic benefits, but reject the
notion that government should favor a particular
set of social values.
6Modern Political Ideologies
- populists are defined as individuals who share
with conservatives a concern for traditional
social values but, like liberals, favor an active
role for government in providing for economic
security.
7Modern Political Ideologies
- libertarians-- are opposed to government
intervention in both the economic and social
spheres.
8Problem with Ideology is that it is often domain
specific
- Phillip Converse argued in an article entitled
The Nature of Belief Systems that ideology is
frequently inconsistent. For example, it is
possible to be a liberal on issues of national
defense while being a conservative on fiscal
matters.
9What affects Voter Choice?
- Issues vs. Image
- The Issues are those things that a candidate
says to make people vote for them. - The Image of a candidate is how they appear to
the voters - Now we realize it is all about Message
- The idea here is that the voting decision is a
choice among alternatives available not the best
choice for the job nor real differences in
political ideology or programs.
10Issue DrivenTwo Types of Voting...
- Prospective votingdescribes some voters who are
highly informed on the issues and cast their
ballots on this basis. These voters know the
issue positions of candidates and choose the
candidate whose proposals best match their
positions.
11Issue DrivenTwo Types of Voting...
- Retrospective votingwhen voters support the
incumbent party or candidate irrespective of
their ideology but because they are pleased with
the performance of a candidate. Similarly it is
retrospective voting when a voter reverses their
position when they are displeased with a
candidates performance. - retrospective voting can be an effective form of
popular control because it forces public
officials to anticipate the voters likely
response in the next election.
123 Sources of Power in Politics
- Framing the Debate--the power to influence how
events and issues are interpreted -
- Agenda Setting--the power to bring public
attention to particular issues and problems - Campaigns and Elections --the power to shape
popular perceptions of politicians and political
leaders AND WHAT ISSUES ARE IMPORTANT
13Controlling the Agendain Politics
- In politics today there is a titanic struggle
going on over what is known as agenda setting. - On one side are POLITICIANS, who believe that
THEY should decide what their campaigns will be
based on, and if the voters dont like the issues
theyve chosen to run on, they wont win.
14Controlling the Agendain Politics
- On the other side is the media. A new and
interesting school of journalism called civic
journalism, asserts that too many difficult
issues are ignored during campaigns.
15Controlling the Agendain Politics
- Why is this important? Because the issues that
dominate an election become the issues that
office holders are obliged to deal with. - How do you set the agenda?
- Message and focus!
16Sample Campaign Radio Spot
- Im Dan Holliman, candidate for governor. If Im
elected, I will do everything in my power to
attack the number one issue facing our state - too much sugar in our breakfast cereals. As a
father, I have seen my own children so hopped up
on Sugar Pops, they were bouncing off the walls.
Then they get to school and theyre too wired to
work. They wind up disrupting the class, making
smart-aleck comments to the teacher and getting
into fights during recess. Then, when the sugar
rush wears off, theyre lazy and lethargic.
Sugar-filled cereals are screwing up our test
scores, contributing to the dropout rate and
leading our children on a frenzied rush to a life
of crime. Make me your governor and Capn Chrunch
will go down with his ship.
17Likely Opinion Page Response
- Without so much as a word about security,
abortion, environment, taxes, crime or welfare,
Mr. Holliman seeks our states highest office. A
jeremiad against processed sugar is ludicrous.
The food manufacturers and the FDA assure us the
cereals are perfectly healthy. Mr. Holliman would
do well to broaden his horizons, abandon his Don
Quixote quest against Count Chocula and address
the real issue facing this state
18Staying on Message!!!
- You want to fight crime? Stop sending kids into
the world wired on Cocoa Puffs. You want
security. Keep the snipers away from the cold
cereal. You want to reduce welfare dependency?
Help low-income families afford brain food like
wheat germ. Abortion? Thered be a lot fewer
unwanted pregnancies if teenagers brains weren't
scrambled by all that sugar. And the environment?
The crap we pour into our unsuspecting kids
cereal bowls each morning contains as many toxins
as a Superfund site. The reasons the newspaper
is attacking my candidacy is because its in the
pocket of the grocery stores.
19How not to win an election
- Im Dirk Dolittle. Im running for governor
because I truly love this state. I was born here.
My lovely wife, Louise, and I have raised three
wonderful children here. If you love our state as
much as we do, if you want us to have a future as
bright as the best days of our proud past, Id
appreciate your support.
20Major Kinds of Campaign Strategies that
Candidates Use
- Positive
- War of Attrition-- Take what you can get
- Issue Dominated
- Winning your Base
- Coalition Politics
- Change the nature of the electorate
- Draw the Difference
- Diversion
- Hard Negative
- Attach yourself to larger Issues
21Wedge Issues In American Politics
- Gay Rights
- Guns
- Abortion
- Development vs. Environment
- Labor vs.. Business
- Sex (harassment and education)
- Race
- Haves vs. Have nots
- Religion in Schools
22Public Opinion
- Defined as...
- Those opinions held by private persons that
governments find it prudent to heed. - (V.O. Key)
- prudent because of their concern about their
electoral fates - need not be actively expressed--even if public
opinion is latent, public officials may act or
fail to act because they fear arousing it.
23Sources ofPublic Opinion
- Socialization
- encompasses all the ways in which people learn
beliefs and values in their families, schools,
communities, churches, and workplaces. - Interests
- Some of the opinions people hold are based on
their personal interests or the interests of
others like them
24Sources of Public Opinion
- Education
- promotes tolerance to differing views
- The more highly educated are more tolerant
- the values emphasized in higher
education--logical argument, open-mindedness,
unemotional analysis--predispose the educated,
liberal and conservatives alike to a somewhat
greater acceptance of people and practices
different form them and theirs
25Sources of Public Opinion
- The Media
- Is opinion determined by the media? The answer is
very unclear. - Under some circumstances the media can move
public opinion, while under other circumstances
the media are ineffectual.
26Critics of Public Opinion
- Because of their prominence, some critics charge
that American government has degenerated into
government by opinion poll - But the real problem is that public opinion is
not some well-defined, stable object that can be
easily and accurately measured. It is often a
moving target.
27Problems of Public Opinion
- Mismeasurement
- Public Opinion Often is Uninformed
- Public Opinion is Often Unconnected
- Public Opinion is Often Inconsistent
28Example of mismeasurement
- In 1993 one poll indicated that 22 percent of the
American public believed it - possible that Nazi extermination of the Jews
never happened. - Another 12 percent were unsure. In total ,
one-third of all Americans apparently entertained
doubts that the Nazis had murdered over 6 million
Jews (and others) in World War II.
29Clarity in Polling
- The Roper question was worded this way...
- Does it seem possible, or does it seem
impossible to you that the Nazi extermination of
the Jews never happened?
30Clarity in Polling
- One of the first rules of survey research--the
scientific design and administration of public
opinion polls-- is to keep questions clear and
simple. - The Roper question fails that test because it
contains a double negative--impossible...never
happened--a grammatical construction long known
to confuse people.
31Clarity in Polling
- An Alternative Question (and results!)
- Does it seem possible to you that the Nazi
extermination of the Jews never happened, or do
you feel certain that it happened? - With this question, less than 10 percent of the
sample were Holocaust doubters.
32Two Main Point to Remember
- I. Public Opinion is extremely important in a
democracy. Why? Because people care deeply about
what their fellow citizens believein large part
because they believe that in the long run public
opinion determines what government does.
33Two Main Points To Remember
- II. Whatever its importance, it is often
difficult to know what public opinion is. - One has to carefully look at the question.
- Question wording can produce significant
differences in measured opinion.
34Another Example
- We are faced with many problem in this country,
none of which can be solved easily or
inexpensively. I am going to name some of these
problems and for each one Id like you to tell me
whether you think were spending too much money ,
too little money, or about the right amount.
35Another Example
- When the public was asked about welfare in the
Spring of 1994 the responses were as followed - Too little 13
- About right 25
- Too much 62
36Another Example
- When the same people in the same poll were asked
about assistance to the poor a large majority
responded that too little was being spent - too little 59
- About right 25
- Too much 16
37Problems of Public Opinion
- Mismeasurement
- Public Opinion Often is Uninformed
- Public Opinion is Often Unconnected
- Public Opinion is Often Inconsistent