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THE IMPACT OF IDEOLOGICAL POLARIZATION ON IRAQ-WAR ATTITUDES IN 2004 CONTROLLING FOR GENDER Roger C. Lowery PLS 401, Senior Seminar Department of Public.

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Presentation on theme: "THE IMPACT OF IDEOLOGICAL POLARIZATION ON IRAQ-WAR ATTITUDES IN 2004 CONTROLLING FOR GENDER Roger C. Lowery PLS 401, Senior Seminar Department of Public."— Presentation transcript:

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2 THE IMPACT OF IDEOLOGICAL POLARIZATION ON IRAQ-WAR ATTITUDES IN 2004 CONTROLLING FOR GENDER Roger C. Lowery PLS 401, Senior Seminar Department of Public & International Affairs UNC Wilmington 11/26/20151

3 Theory: –The early “rally-’round-the –flag” support for war in the public erodes over time. (Mueller, 1973) –ABC News/Washington Post polls*: "All in all, considering the costs to the United States versus the benefits to the United States, do you think the war with Iraq was worth fighting, or not?” ( http://www.pollingreport.com/iraq2.htm ) http://www.pollingreport.com/iraq2.htm H 1 : the 2004 presidential campaign, did not generate a consensus among the American public concerning whether the Iraq-War costs were worthwhile. 11/26/20152 Univariate Hypothesis

4 11/26/20153 Table 1: 3 Random-sampling error margin = ± 3.0 % “Do you think the war in Iraq has been worth the cost?” * Cells contain: -Column percent -Weighted N Distribution Iraq-War Costs 1: Worth it 41.1 426 2: Not worth it 58.9 610 COL TOTAL 100.0 1,036 * Source: V092, 2004 NES subset, Prysby & Scavo, SETUPS: Voting Behavior

5 11/26/20154 Univariate Findings H 1 : (by the 2004 presidential campaign, there was no consensus among the American public whether the Iraq-War costs were worthwhile) is not supported by the sample data because: 1.Although the predicted lack of consensus is found in the sample results observed; nonetheless, 2.with a random-sampling error margin of ± 3.0 %, there may or may not be a “cost-not-worth-it” consensus in the national population from which that sample was drawn (58.9 + 3.0 = 61.9%). 3.However, it is statistically (and substantively) significant that by 2004, the majority of the U.S. public had decided that the costs of the Iraq War were no longer justified (58.9 – 3.0 = 55.9%).

6 Bivariate Hypothesis Theory: –We saw in the SETUPS Exercise 8 that the ideological polarization of the mass base of the two political parties was very strong by 2004.* –Since Bush was running as a staunch supporter of the Iraq War and Kerry was running as a vocal critic, it is reasonable to presume that the publics’ views on the war were also ideologically polarized. H 2 : by 2004, liberals in the electorate were more likely than conservatives to say that the Iraq-War costs were no longer worth continuing. * http://people.uncw.edu/lowery/pls401/Term_project/index.htm http://people.uncw.edu/lowery/pls401/Term_project/index.htm 11/26/20155

7 Table 2: 11/26/20156 Summary Statistics Tau-b = - 0.40; Chi-square probability = 0.00 Iraq-War Costs by Political Ideology * Cells contain: -Column percent -Weighted N Political Ideology 1 Liberal 2 Moderate 3 Conservative ROW TOTAL Iraq-War Costs 1: Worth it 13.3 26 35.9 95 64.6 218 42.5 339 2: Not worth it 86.7 170 64.1 170 35.4 119 57.5 459 COL TOTAL 100.0 196 100.0 265 100.0 337 100.0 797 * Source: V068, 2004 NES subset, Prysby & Scavo, SETUPS: Voting Behavior

8 Bivariate Findings H 2 (by 2004, liberals were more likely than conservatives to say that the Iraq-War costs were no longer worth continuing) is strongly supported by the sample data in Table 2 because: 1.The predicted pattern is observed (the tau b of - 0.40 indicates that ideological polarization on the cost of the war is very strong in the sample). 2.In addition, this sample finding is statistically significant and thus can be extrapolated to the national electorate (the χ 2 probability of random-sampling error is 0.00). 11/26/20157

9 Multivariate Hypothesis Theory: –If women are more likely than men to be liberal. –And, if women are more likely than men to be opposed to war. –Then, it is plausible to predict that at least some of the ideological polarization on the Iraq War at the bivariate level is spurious (due to the joint influence of gender on attitudes toward both war and political ideology) H 3 : compared to the total electorate, the intensity of ideological polarization on the Iraq-War costs in will be weaker within both males and females. 11/26/20158

10 Table 3a 11/26/20159 Summary Statistics Tau-b = - 0.40 Chi-square probability = 0.00 Iraq-War Costs by Political Ideology (Males) * Cells contain: -Column percent -Weighted N Political Ideology 1 Liberal 2 Moderate 3 Conservative ROW TOTAL Iraq-War Costs 1: Worth it 14.8 13 30.0 41 64.9 120 42.7 174 2: Not worth it 85.2 73 70.0 95 35.1 65 57.3 233 COL TOTAL 100.0 86 100.0 136 100.0 185 100.0 407 * Source: V143, 2004 NES subset, Prysby & Scavo, SETUPS: Voting Behavior

11 Table 3b 11/26/201510 Summary Statistics Tau-b = - 0.40 Chi-square probability = 0.00 Iraq-War Costs by Political Ideology (Females) * Cells contain: -Column percent -Weighted N Political Ideology 1 Liberal 2 Moderate 3 Conservative ROW TOTAL Iraq-War Costs 1: Worth it 12.1 13 42.1 54 64.2 98 42.3 165 2: Not worth it 87.9 96 57.9 74 35.8 54 57.7 225 COL TOTAL 100.0 110 100.0 129 100.0 152 100.0 390 * Source: V143, 2004 NES subset, Prysby & Scavo, SETUPS: Voting Behavior

12 Multivariate Findings H 3 (compared to the total electorate, the intensity of ideological polarization on the Iraq-War costs in will be weaker within both males and females) is contradicted by the sample data in Tables 3a & 3b because: 1.The strength of ideological polarization did not change as predicted in the partial-table subgroups: the tau b did not weaken but remained equally strong within the male and female subgroups as it was in the total electorate. 2.These sample findings were statistically significant in all three partial tables at the 0.00 level. 3.Although females were more likely than males to self- identify as liberal, a statistically significant majority of both genders said that “… the Iraq-War was not worth the cost.” 11/26/201511

13 Substantive Implications By 2004, the majority of the U.S. public had decided that the costs of the Iraq War were no longer justified. The ideological polarization of partisan elites that strengthened in the 1960s had spread to the mass public and by 2004 was very strong in structuring public assessments of the Iraq War. By 2004, this ideological polarization had also overwhelmed the previously evident gender gap in war attitudes. This ideological polarization of both males and females has the disadvantage of impeding the bargaining and compromise so often crucial to achieving the best approximation of the common good in a pluralistic society within a fragmented political system. 11/26/201512

14 Methodological Implications Given the erosion of public support for the Iraq War through 2004, further tracking to the present would be worthwhile so that long-term trends could be compared to prior, lengthy U.S. wars (WWII, Korea, Vietnam). Since wording changes often affect survey-question results, a close look at alternate wordings of Iraq-War questions would be a useful. Because bargaining and compromise are essential to the health of a pluralistic democracy, other important groups in society (e.g., racial, religious, ethnic, regional) should also be examined to measure their level of ideological polarization. 11/26/2015 13

15 11/26/201514 References Mueller, John E. 1973. War, Presidents, and Public Opinion. New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Polling Report. “Iraq” accessed, 3/24/09.http://www.pollingreport.com/iraq2.htm Prysby, Charles, Carmine Scavo, American Political Science Association, and Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research. SETUPS: Voting Behavior: The 2004 Election [Web site]. Greensboro, NC: Charles Prysby, University of North Carolina/Greenville, NC: Carmine Scavo, East Carolina University/Washington, DC: American Political Science Association/Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [producers], 2005. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor], 2005. http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/SETUPS/frame01.html Shively, W. Phillips. 2008. Power & Choice: An Introduction to Political Science. 11e. Boston: McGraw-Hill.


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