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Political participation. Beliefs about politics. People hold widely differing views about politics Political efficacy Trust in institutions Belief in your own ability to affect policy Role and duties of citizenship. Data on political beliefs. General Social Survey, 1972-2006
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Beliefs about politics • People hold widely differing views about politics • Political efficacy • Trust in institutions • Belief in your own ability to affect policy • Role and duties of citizenship
Data on political beliefs • General Social Survey, 1972-2006 • National Opinion Research Center
Agree or disagree: The average person has a great deal of influence on government decisions
Gallup evaluation • Implications • The public is clearly frustrated with the government's performance; thus, the presidential candidates' competition to be viewed as the "candidate of change" makes sense. It is unclear how much a change in leadership by itself will necessarily improve public trust. . . . . • But ratings of government institutions are to a large degree influenced by assessments of conditions for the United States both domestically (especially in terms of the economy) and internationally. Historically, these assessments have been slow to recover when at similarly low levels. • Source: Jeffrey M. Jones, “Trust in Government Remains Low,” The Gallup Report, September 18, 2008. Available at: http://www.gallup.com/poll/110458/Trust-Government-Remains-Low.aspx
Citizenship in democracy • Unlike other forms of government, democracy—if it is to really be democracy—requires active participation from among the citizenry • Cannot simply vote every so often and then forget about it till the next election • There may never be another election
The state of political participation • The most significant form of political participation for the largest group of Americans is voting • Americans don’t vote at a very high level compared to the democracies of the world • http://www.idea.int/index.cfm
However: • Several reasons for low turnout exist • There is no holiday for elections • Voting is not required • Actual impact on the outcome is quite limited • “You’re more likely to be hit by a bus” • Distrust of government
Other forms of participation • Support for candidates • Campaigning • Financial support • Discussion of candidates and issues • Active petitioning of officials • Lobbying
American political behavior • Data are from the General Social Survey, a large-scale omnibus survey by the University of Michigan, from the years 1972-2006. Many questions were only run one time, generating about 1,000 responses. Some were run multiple times, at about 1,000 responses per year.
Political participation • Overall participation is rather low • However, participation varies a great deal based on: • Age • Race • Education • Socioeconomic class • Interestingly, gender is not a very good predictor