Political Science 10: Introduction to American Politics Week 3

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Political Science 10: Introduction to American Politics Week 3 Taylor Carlson tncarlson@ucsd.edu October 19, 2017 Carlson POLI 10-Week 3 October 19, 2017 1 / 13

Plan for the Day Reading Quiz Go over learning outcomes Announcements Answer questions from lecture this week Discuss Zaller (2003): Coming to Grips with V.O. Key s Concept of Latent Opinion Carlson POLI 10-Week 3 October 19, 2017 2 / 13

Reading Quiz Clearly write your name at the top of the quiz Turn your quiz over when you are finished Good luck! Carlson POLI 10-Week 3 October 19, 2017 3 / 13

Learning Outcomes By the end of section today, you should be able to: Define public opinion Define and explain the concept of latent opinion Explain whether and when public opinion and latent opinion are meaningful Explain how this relates to latent opinion Explain how this relates to the notion of representative government Describe the conditions under which politicians listen to (or ignore) public opinion Carlson POLI 10-Week 3 October 19, 2017 4 / 13

Announcements Reminder: Office Hours are Wednesdays 8am-9:30am and 11am-12pm in SSB 341, or by appointment (tncarlson@ucsd.edu) If you would like feedback on your take-home essay, please turn a rough draft in to me in section by week 6 (November 9th). I will not give you a grade, but I am happy to provide comments. Recommendations for Preparing for the Final Paper: Read the Constitution and Amendments! Is there anything that you find problematic? Why? What is the root cause of the problem and how would you go about fixing it? Think about the reasons why real Amendments were introduced. What problem(s) did they address? Did the Amendment provide a sufficient solution? Free write (write for 5-10 minutes without stopping! Just write!) about any problems you observe in the political world today. Read over your thoughts and think about how you might be able to solve those problems with a Constitutional Amendment. Carlson POLI 10-Week 3 October 19, 2017 5 / 13

Questions?? What questions do you have from lecture this week? We will go over an example of the Median Voter Theorem in next week s section Carlson POLI 10-Week 3 October 19, 2017 6 / 13

What is public opinion? Carlson POLI 10-Week 3 October 19, 2017 7 / 13

What is public opinion? Those opinions held by private persons which governments find it prudent to heed. (LAP Glossary, p. 685, LAP Chapter 10, p. 401, citing V.O. Key) Carlson POLI 10-Week 3 October 19, 2017 7 / 13

What is public opinion? Those opinions held by private persons which governments find it prudent to heed. (LAP Glossary, p. 685, LAP Chapter 10, p. 401, citing V.O. Key) private persons Carlson POLI 10-Week 3 October 19, 2017 7 / 13

What is public opinion? Those opinions held by private persons which governments find it prudent to heed. (LAP Glossary, p. 685, LAP Chapter 10, p. 401, citing V.O. Key) private persons governments Carlson POLI 10-Week 3 October 19, 2017 7 / 13

What is public opinion? Those opinions held by private persons which governments find it prudent to heed. (LAP Glossary, p. 685, LAP Chapter 10, p. 401, citing V.O. Key) private persons governments prudent to heed Carlson POLI 10-Week 3 October 19, 2017 7 / 13

What is latent opinion? Carlson POLI 10-Week 3 October 19, 2017 8 / 13

What is latent opinion? Latent opinion is opinion that might exist at some point in the future in response to the decision makers actions and may perhaps result in political damage or even defeat at the polls. (Zaller, 2003, p. 311 paraphrasing V.O. Key) Carlson POLI 10-Week 3 October 19, 2017 8 / 13

What is latent opinion? Latent opinion is opinion that might exist at some point in the future in response to the decision makers actions and may perhaps result in political damage or even defeat at the polls. (Zaller, 2003, p. 311 paraphrasing V.O. Key) According to Zaller and Key, is public opinion, as measured by the polls, a good indicator of latent opinion? Carlson POLI 10-Week 3 October 19, 2017 8 / 13

What is latent opinion? Latent opinion is opinion that might exist at some point in the future in response to the decision makers actions and may perhaps result in political damage or even defeat at the polls. (Zaller, 2003, p. 311 paraphrasing V.O. Key) According to Zaller and Key, is public opinion, as measured by the polls, a good indicator of latent opinion? No. Why? Carlson POLI 10-Week 3 October 19, 2017 8 / 13

What is latent opinion? Latent opinion is opinion that might exist at some point in the future in response to the decision makers actions and may perhaps result in political damage or even defeat at the polls. (Zaller, 2003, p. 311 paraphrasing V.O. Key) According to Zaller and Key, is public opinion, as measured by the polls, a good indicator of latent opinion? No. Why? Examples? Carlson POLI 10-Week 3 October 19, 2017 8 / 13

What is latent opinion? Latent opinion is opinion that might exist at some point in the future in response to the decision makers actions and may perhaps result in political damage or even defeat at the polls. (Zaller, 2003, p. 311 paraphrasing V.O. Key) According to Zaller and Key, is public opinion, as measured by the polls, a good indicator of latent opinion? No. Why? Examples? Propensity of voters to punish presidents at the polls for bad economic performance (or reward for good economic performance) Rally around the flag effect Propensity to resist painful trade-offs and punish politicians who force choices Carlson POLI 10-Week 3 October 19, 2017 8 / 13

When are politicians constrained by public opinion? Responsive to Public Opinion (polls) Responsive to Latent Opinion (ignore polls) Carlson POLI 10-Week 3 October 19, 2017 9 / 13

Applying Latent Opinion to a Real World Example As you study for the exam, you can work through the following example to apply your knowledge of latent opinion to the ACA. Carlson POLI 10-Week 3 October 19, 2017 10 / 13

A More Recent Example: the ACA (AKA Obamacare) Affordable Care Act or Obamacare? (53 seconds in) Carlson POLI 10-Week 3 October 19, 2017 11 / 13

A More Recent Example: the ACA (AKA Obamacare) Affordable Care Act or Obamacare? (53 seconds in) Some data supporting this (September 2013 poll) Carlson POLI 10-Week 3 October 19, 2017 11 / 13

A More Recent Example: the ACA (AKA Obamacare) Affordable Care Act or Obamacare? (53 seconds in) Some data supporting this (September 2013 poll) Let s look at the public opinion on the ACA/Obamacare over time Carlson POLI 10-Week 3 October 19, 2017 11 / 13

A More Recent Example: the ACA (AKA Obamacare) Source: Kaiser Family Foundation Health Tracking Poll Carlson POLI 10-Week 3 October 19, 2017 12 / 13

A More Recent Example: the ACA (AKA Obamacare) Source: Kaiser Family Foundation Health Tracking Poll Carlson POLI 10-Week 3 October 19, 2017 13 / 13

Bringing it all together What does this Obamacare/ACA example tell us about whether public opinion about the ACA is meaningful? Do you think President Obama was responding to public or latent opinion? What about members of Congress? Thinking more broadly, what does Zaller s proposition about when presidents should respond to public vs. latent opinion tell us about representative government? Would you expect this to apply to other politicians as well? Should we continue to measure public opinion? Carlson POLI 10-Week 3 October 19, 2017 14 / 13