GROUP DIFFERENCES ON
ISSUES
(Week 9)
(Note: these are actual class notes,
valuable to those having an excused class absence, or those wishing to review
their class notes for the test. Double spaced notes reflect subjects that are
so important that they are likely to be asked about on a test.)
Socioeconomic Status (SES)-
Measured by education level, income, occupational prestige, or perceived social
class. The lower SES tend to be more liberal on domestic economic programs than
the upper SES, as they are more likely to benefit from such programs.
Therefore, the lower SES are more supportive of health care spending, child
care support, Social Security, unemployment insurance, public jobs, and
domestic spending and social services in general, than are the upper SES. (textbook, pages 186, 187) The
upper SES, particularly the college educated, tend to be more liberal on race
and civil liberty issues, such as supporting choice on abortion, government spending
assistance for minorities, supporting gun control, and opposing the death
penalty (see text, page 188). The upper SES, particularly the college educated, tend to be more internationalist
on foreign policy than the lower SES, backing diplomacy, international trade,
the Persian Gulf War, and Kosovo peacekeeping, maybe because they tend to
support the President during international crises (text, pages 190-191). Class discussion- why are
the lower SES more conservative on race and civil liberty issues? Has college
made you more liberal on these issues, and explain how?
Race- African-Americans are
more liberal on a diverse range of issues, compared to whites.
African-Americans are the more liberal group on domestic economic issues,
backing more government spending on jobs, welfare, health care, and education,
compared to whites. African-Americans are more liberal than whites on racial
issues, such as affirmative action and racial profiling issues.
African-Americans are more liberal than whites on civil liberty issues, such as
opposition to the death penalty, for gun control, for LGBTQ rights. (see text, page 196) Why are
African Americans significantly more liberal than whites on such a range of
issues? Partly is that minorities tend to have lower incomes than whites,
explaining the support for economic issues. Also, historically African
Americans have experienced centuries of slavery and discrimination, sensitizing
the group to the struggles that they and other groups have had to face. African
Americans therefore tend to vote heavily Democratic. Class discussion- how can
the Republican Party gain more black support? What about Republicans in their
private capacity setting up non-profits that help the black community, such as
providing vouchers so that African American kids could attend any private,
Christian, or Catholic school that they wish? Any other ideas??
Age- Young adults under 35 are more liberal than
older adults over 55 on race and civil liberty issues. Nationally, the young have
been more supportive of racial integration and more opposed to racial
discrimination, than the elderly. In Mississippi, the young are more supportive
of affirmative action and government financial aid to minorities than the old. The
young nationally are more supportive than the old of women’s rights, abortion,
gay rights, and marijuana legalization. In
Mississippi, the young are more supportive of same sex marriage than the old.
Why are the younger generation generally more liberal on race and civil liberty
issues? Are they less tied to tradition than the old? Are they more supportive
of individual freedom?? But why the speech codes, then? The young are also
somewhat more liberal than the old on domestic economic issues. Nationally,
they favor more spending on government services generally, such as public jobs
and student loans, but they are more conservative on Social Security and the
minimum wage. (see textbook, page 200) In Mississippi, young adults are more liberal on a range of
domestic economic issues than the old, including backing more government
spending on health care, poverty programs, child support, public jobs, public
schools, and environmental protection. Why have the young grown so accepting of
the government guaranteeing so many quality-of-life programs? Maybe because the
older generation grew up under a smaller government footprint, where the individual
was on-their-own, so to speak? What do you think?
Sex- Women are less supportive
of the use of force to resolve social problems, compared to men. (see text, page 215) Therefore,
women are more supportive of gun control than men, more opposed to the death
penalty, and more opposed to using military force. Why do you think that men
and women differ on these kinds of issues? Do you conform to your own gender
pattern (Remember that all of these differences are not great, so many people
disagree with the majority of their own sex, particularly in the South.)? Women
are also slightly more compassionate than men, backing social welfare programs
such as poverty spending, health care, jobs, Social Security, income
equalization, child care spending, and more government spending on social
programs more than men do. Interestingly
enough, though, there are no differences between women and men on some “women’s
issues”, such as abortion and an equal role for women in politics and society.
The same exists in Mississippi, where men and women differ by less than 5% on
abortion and a woman’s role item. Why are women more compassionate on economic
issues and more opposed to the use of force, compared to men? What do you
think? Why are there NOT differences between the sexes on some women’s issues? Any
ideas??
Other groups. The South has historically been more
conservative than the North. Yet during the 1930s New Deal of FDR, the South
backed his liberal economic programs, because of its poverty. Today, regional
differences in issue attitudes have diminished. Northern whites have become
more conservative on race and social issues, while southern whites have become
less conservative. White high school dropouts remain the most racially
conservative, especially in the South. In a 1988 study, about one-third of
white southern high school dropouts backed segregation in the public schools.
Similar results occurred in Mississippi. Problem of socially desirable
responses in survey data. Using an unobtrusive measure of racial hostility, one
study examining whites in the South and non-South found that only southern
whites became angry if "a black family moves next door," and that
white anger was concentrated among men rather than women. Regional differences
in party identification among whites has been eliminated. White Southerners
used to be very Democratic, but by 2004 they were evenly split between the
parties, as were whites in the north. By 2012, southern whites were
significantly more likely to be Republicans than Democrats. Jews and
atheists-agnostics are more likely to call themselves "liberals,"
compared to Protestants and Catholics. Both groups are more liberal than other
religious groups on civil liberty and race issues, such as abortion, marijuana,
school prayer, equal rights for women, and government aid to blacks. Jewish religion
is the most Democratic in terms of party identification and voting behavior of
any religious group. Few differences exist today between Protestant and
Catholics, though Protestants are slightly more likely to label themselves
conservative, and lean slightly more towards the Republican party. Among white
protestants, the Religious (Evangelicals) are more conservative on domestic
economic, civil liberty, and military issues, than are the Secular Protestants.
(p. 206, Erikson and Tedin American Public Opinion 10th Edition,
Pearson/Longman Publishers) Fundamentalists are also more Republican in party
identification and federal voting behavior.