CODEBOOK: American National Election Study Panel Subset (anespanl.sav)

Similar documents
U.S. Catholics split between intent to vote for Kerry and Bush.

CODEBOOK/TOPLINES AP SURVEY OF UNDECIDED VOTERS September 21-28, ,329 likely undecided voters

Global Warming and the 2008 Presidential Election

THE AP-GfK POLL. Conducted by GfK Roper Public Affairs & Media

1. In general, do you think things in this country are heading in the right direction or the wrong direction? Strongly approve. Somewhat approve Net

Interview dates: September 6 8, 2013 Number of interviews: 1,007

Democracy Corps National/Presidential Battleground Frequency Questionnaire

Democracy Corps Frequency Questionnaire

Democracy Corps Frequency Questionnaire

November 2017 Toplines

Democracy Corps Frequency Questionnaire

Democracy Corps - Inner Mountain West Frequency Questionnaire

Democracy Corps Frequency Questionnaire

Marquette Law School Poll September 15-18, Results for all items among Likely Voters

September 2017 Toplines

HART RESEARCH ASSOCIATES/PUBLIC OPINION STRATEGIES Study # page 1

National Public Radio: Presidential Battleground Frequency Questionnaire

Democracy Corps - Mountain West Frequency Questionnaire

Democracy Corps Frequency Questionnaire

Americans and the News Media: What they do and don t understand about each other. General Population Survey

Democracy Corps Frequency Questionnaire

Democracy Corps Frequency Questionnaire

HART/McINTURFF Study # page 1

HART/McINTURFF Study # page 1. Interviews: 1000 Registered Voters, including 300 cell phone only respondents Date: October 17-20, 2012

Democracy Corps/Center for American Progress Frequency Questionnaire

Catholics for a Free Choice 2004 Survey of Catholic Likely Voters Page 2

Democracy Corps Frequency Questionnaire

Democracy Corps Frequency Questionnaire

Democracy Corps National/Presidential Battleground Frequency Questionnaire

HART RESEARCH ASSOCIATES/PUBLIC OPINION STRATEGIES Study # page 1

Summer 2008 N=800 Adults July 18-30, Q1. Are you registered to vote in the state of Texas? 84% Yes, registered. 14% No, not registered.

Exit Polls 2000 Election

DUI Arrest Not a Factor, So Far SLIGHT BUSH MARGIN HOLDING WITH DAYS TO GO

Law Enforcement and Violence: The Divide between Black and White Americans

PSCI 241: American Public Opinion and Voting Behavior Statistical Analysis of the 2000 National Election Study in STATA

GenForward March 2019 Toplines

Simon Poll, Fall 2018 (statewide)

AARP Pre-First-Debate National Survey Miami, September 30, 2004

The October 2018 AP-NORC Center Poll

Pew Research Center Final Survey POPULAR VOTE A TOSSUP: BUSH 49%, GORE 47%, NADER 4%

HART/McINTURFF Study # page 1. Interviews: 1000 adults, including 200 reached by cell phone Date: August 5-9, 2010

February 18-22, 2009 N= 1,112

HART/McINTURFF Study # page 1. Interviews: 900 Registered Voters, including 270 cell phone only respondents Date: September 12-16, 2012

Democracy Corps Frequency Questionnaire

GW POLITICS POLL 2018 MIDTERM ELECTION WAVE 1

Swing Voters Criticize Bush on Economy, Support Him on Iraq THREE-IN-TEN VOTERS OPEN TO PERSUASION

TOPLINE RESULTS University of Delaware, Center for Political Communication NATIONAL AGENDA POLL HOLD FOR RELEASE 6:30AM OCTOBER 6, 2010

The Hall of Mirrors: Perceptions and Misperceptions in the Congressional Foreign Policy Process

HIGH POINT UNIVERSITY POLL MEMO RELEASE 9/24/2018 (UPDATE)

Unit #2: Political Beliefs/Political Behaviors AP US Government & Politics Mr. Coia

FINAL RESULTS: National Voter Survey Total Sample Size: 2428, Margin of Error: ±2.0% Interview Dates: November 1-4, 2018

NPR/Democracy Corps/Resurgent Republic Frequency Questionnaire

UndecidedVotersinthe NovemberPresidential Election. anationalsurvey

Unit #2: Political Beliefs/Political Behaviors AP US Government & Politics Mr. Coia

Bush Inches Above 50%; First-Timers are a Wildcard

HART RESEARCH ASSOCIATES/PUBLIC OPINION STRATEGIES Study # page 1

Tulane University Post-Election Survey November 8-18, Executive Summary

HIGH POINT UNIVERSITY POLL MEMO RELEASE 10/13/2017 (UPDATE)

Democracy Corps - Third Way Frequency Questionnaire

The foreign born are more geographically concentrated than the native population.

Online Appendix 1: Treatment Stimuli

q10 What do you think will be the most important campaign issue in your state?

The margin of error for 1,008 interviews is ± 3.1%

Democracy Corps - New Jersey Frequency Questionnaire

Democracy Corps/Republican Party Project Frequency Questionnaire

Statewide General Benchmark August

Characteristics of People. The Latino population has more people under the age of 18 and fewer elderly people than the non-hispanic White population.

Moral Values Take Back Seat to Partisanship and the Economy In 2004 Presidential Election

United States General Exit Poll PRES04 - Horizontal Percentages Time of Weighting: 11/2/2004 7:33:46 PM Time Created: 11/2/2004 7:33:46 PM

Marist College Institute for Public Opinion Poughkeepsie, NY Phone Fax

Our first questions are about international affairs and foreign policy.

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS IMMIGRATION STUDY CONDUCTED BY IPSOS PUBLIC AFFAIRS RELEASE DATE: MARCH 31, 2006 PROJECT # IMMIGRATION STUDY

Democracy Corps/ Women's Voices. Women Vote Action Fund Frequency Questionnaire

POLL Republican National Delegate Survey. July 23 August 26, 2008 N= 854

Economic Issues in Ohio Work to Kerry s Advantage

HISPANIC MEDIA SURVEY Topline - National

The margin of error for 1,004 interviews is ±3.1%

Asian American Survey

Marist College Institute for Public Opinion Poughkeepsie, NY Phone Fax

HART RESEARCH ASSOCIATES/PUBLIC OPINION STRATEGIES Study # page 1

Hart Research Associates/Public Opinion Strategies Study # page 1

Kerry Gains in Personal Ratings, Though Bush Maintains a Lead

Texas Republican Presidential Primary Poll 2/29/16. Sponsor(s) Fox 26 Houston; Fox 7 Austin; Fox 4 Dallas-Fort-Worth.

MCLAUGHLIN & ASSOCIATES NATIONAL OMNIBUS March 23, 2016

1 PEW RESEARCH CENTER

Before we begin, we need to ask you a couple of questions to determine your eligibility for the study.

The margin of error for 1,509 interviews is ± 2.5%

PEW RESEARCH CENTER FOR THE PEOPLE & THE PRESS VOTER CALLBACK SURVEYS 2004 FINAL TOPLINE October 21-25, 2004

First-Term Average 61% 29

2008Hispanic RegisteredVotersSurvey

HART/MCINTURFF Study #6081--page 1

The 2008 Election: How Arab Americans Will Vote and Why

HIGH POINT UNIVERSITY POLL MEMO RELEASE 2/15/2018 (UPDATE)

Clarification of apolitical codes in the party identification summary variable on ANES datasets

Alabama Republican Presidential Primary Poll 2/26/16. None

Marquette Law School Poll June 22-25, 2017

Democracy Corps Frequency Questionnaire

Unit #2: Political Beliefs/Political Behaviors AP US Government & Politics Mr. Coia

Democracy Corps Frequency Questionnaire

RT Strategies National Omnibus Poll Thomas Riehle and Lance Tarrance, Partners. And Cook Political Report/RT Strategies Poll

Transcription:

CODEBOOK: 2000-2004 American National Election Study Panel Subset (anespanl.sav) A subset of the National Election Study 2000-2002-2004 Full Panel File. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan, Center for Political Studies [producer and distributor]. Based on data and codebook downloaded from the National Election Studies web site at http://www.umich.edu/~nes/. This file includes those respondents interviewed in all three election years. A weight variable has been included to adjust for known or estimated sample biases, included those due to sample attrition. The file contains a total of 840 respondents. Variable names have been changed to make them easier to identify. The original variable names are provided in the list that follows. In a few cases, a variable included in this subset was derived from two or more variables in the original data file. VARIABLE NAME ORIGINAL NAME(S) VARIABLE LABEL Note: numbers in parentheses indicate the year the question was asked. Background variables (ethnic and gender are from the 2002 study; other background variables are from the 2000 study): wt04 WT04 Panel Weight region M000092 Census region ideology M000446 Liberal/conservative self-placement - 7-point scale relserv M000877 & Attend religious services how often? M000879 & M000880 yearborn M000907 Year of birth marstat M000909 Marital status educate M000913 Respondent education level ethnic M023150 & Race/ethnicity of respondent M023151 gender M023153 Respondent gender War in Iraq: iraq M045087 Was Iraq war worth the cost? (2004) Party identification: ptyid300 M000519 Respondent party ID, 3-point scale (2000) ptyid302 M023036 Respondent party ID, 3-point scale (2002) ptyid304 M045058 Respondent party ID, 3-point scale (2004) ptyid700 M000523 Respondent party ID, 7-point scale (2000) ptyid702 M023038x Respondent party ID, 7-point scale (2002)

VARIABLE NAME ORIGINAL NAME(S) VARIABLE LABEL ptyid704 M045058x Respondent party ID, 7-point scale (2004) ptystr00 Strength of PARTY ID, 2000 ptystr04 Strength of PARTY ID, 2004 Voting: p200000 M001249 Respondent vote cast in 2000 presidential election (2000) p200002 M023111 Respondent vote cast in 2000 presidential election (2002) p200004 M045003a Respondent vote cast in 2000 presidential election (2004) p2004 M045049A Respondent vote cast in 2004 presidential election (2004) h2000 M001263 Respondent vote cast in 2000 house election (2000) h2002 M025028b Respondent vote cast in 2002 house election (2002) h2004 M045053 Respondent vote cast in 2004 house election (2004) Opinion of other people: worthy00 M001475 Are people trustworthy? (2000) worthy02 M025101 Are people trustworthy? (2002) worthy04 M045158 Are people trustworthy? (2004) fair00 M001476 Are people fair? (2000) fair02 M025102 Are people fair? (2002) fair04 M045159 Are people fair? (2004) help00 M001477 Are people helpful? (2000) help02 M025103 Are people helpful? (2002) help04 M045160 Are people helpful? (2004) Opinion of government: gtrust00 M001534 Can gov t be trusted? (2000) gtrust02 M025174 Can gov t be trusted? (2002) gtrust04 M045149 Can gov t be trusted? (2004) Thermometers: bush00pr M001294 George Bush Thermometer (2000 pre-election) bush00po M001294 George Bush Thermometer (2000 post-election) bush02 M023010 George Bush Thermometer (2002) bush04 M045007 George Bush Thermometer (2004) nadr00pr M000363 Ralph Nader Thermometer (2000 pre-election) nadr00po M001295 Ralph Nader Thermometer (2000 postelection) nadr02 M023014 Ralph Nader Thermometer (2002) nadr04 M045012 Ralph Nader Thermometer (2004) wt04: Sample weight This variable is used to correct for known or estimated sampling biases, including those resulting from inability to re-interview some respondents in the post-election survey.

region Census region 1. Northeast (CT,ME,MA,NH,NJ,NY,PA,RI,VT) 2. Midwest (IL,IN,IA,KS,MI,MN,MO,NE,ND,OH,SD,WI) 3. South (AL,AR,DE,DC,FL,GA,KY,LA,MD,MS,NC,OK,SC,TN,TX,VA,WV) 4. West (AK,AZ,CA,CO,HI,ID,MT,NM,NV,OR,UT,WA,WY) ideology: Liberal/conservative self-placement - 7-point scale 1. Extremely liberal 2. Liberal 3. Slightly liberal 4. Moderate; middle lf the road 5. Slightly conservative 6. Conservative 7. Extremely conservative 8. Don t Know 0. No answer relserv: Attend religious services how often? Lots of things come up that keep people from attending religious services even if they want to. Thinking about your life these days, do you ever attend religious services, apart from occasional weddings, baptisms or funerals? IF RESPONDENT ATTENDS RELIGIOUS SERVICES: Do you go to religious services EVERY WEEK, ALMOST EVERY WEEK, ONCE OR TWICE A MONTH, A FEW TIMES A YEAR, or NEVER? IF RESPONDENT SAYS ATTENDS RELIGIOUS SERVICES 'EVERY WEEK': Would you say you go to religious services ONCE A WEEK or MORE OFTEN than once a week? 1. More than once a week 2. Every week 3. Almost every week 4. Once or twice a month 5. A few times a year 6. Never. Don t Know/Refused/Not applicable yearborn: Year of birth What is the month, day and year of your birth? -----------

9998. DK 9999. RF 0000. NA marstat: Marital status Are you married now and living with your (husband/wife) -- or are you widowed, divorced, separated, or have you never married? 1. Married 2. Widowed 3. Divorced 4. Separated 5. Never married 6. Partnered, not married {VOL} educate: Respondent education level What is the highest grade of school or year of college you have completed? Did you get a high school diploma or pass a high school equivalency test? What is the highest degree that you have earned? 1. 8 grades or less and no diploma or equivalency 2. 9-11 grades, no further schooling (incl. 12 years without diploma or equivalency) 3. High school diploma or equivalency test 4. More than 12 years of schooling, no higher degree 5. Junior or community college level degrees (AA degrees) 6. BA level degrees; 17+ years, no advanced degree 7. Advanced degree, including LLB 9. Don t Know/Refused/No answer ethnic: Race/ethnicity of Respondent 1. Black 2. Asian 3. Native American 4. Hispanic 5. White 6. Multiracial/Other 7. Don't know 8. Refused 9. No answer gender: Respondent gender

1. Male 2. Female iraq: Taking everything into account, do you think the war in Iraq has been WORTH THE COST or NOT? 1. Worth it 5. Not worth it ptyid300: Respondent party ID, 3-point scale (2000) ptyid302: Respondent party ID, 3-point scale (2002) ptyid304: Respondent party ID, 3-point scale (2004) Generally speaking, do you usually think of yourself as a REPUBLICAN, a DEMOCRAT, an INDEPENDENT, or what? 1. Republican 2. Independent 3. Democrat 4. Other party {SPECIFY} 5. No preference 0. No answer ptyid700: Respondent party ID, 7-point scale (2000) ptyid702: Respondent party ID, 7-point scale (2002) ptyid704: Respondent party ID, 7-point scale (2004) Generally speaking, do you usually think of yourself as a REPUBLICAN, a DEMOCRAT, an INDEPENDENT, or what? Would you call yourself a STRONG [Democrat/Republican] or a NOT VERY STRONG [Democrat/Republican]? Do you think of yourself as CLOSER to the Republican Party or to the Democratic party? 0. Strong Democrat 1. Weak Democrat 2. Independent-Democrat 3. Independent-Independent 4. Independent-Republican 5. Weak Republican 6. Strong Republican 7. Other; minor party; refuses to say

8. Apolitical 9. DK Note: Code 8 (apolitical) was used if Respondent was coded No preference and also showed little or no interest in politics in response to the following survey questions: Interest in campaigns Care about Congressional race outcome Voted Follow public affairs ptystr00: Strength of Party ID, 2000 ptystr04: Strength of Party ID, 2004 1. Strong 2. Weak 3. Leaning 4. Pure Independent 9. DK p200000: Respondent vote cast in 2000 presidential election (2000) p200002: Respondent vote cast in 2000 presidential election (2002) p200004: Respondent vote cast in 2000 presidential election (2004) 1. Gore 3. Bush 5. Nader 7. Other 0. Not applicable. Not applicable p2004 Respondent vote cast in 2004 presidential election 1. Kerry 3. Bush 5. Nader 7. Other. Not applicable

h2000 h2002 h2004 Respondent vote cast in 2000 house election Respondent vote cast in 2002 house election Respondent vote cast in 2004 house election 1. Democratic 2. Republican 3. Other 8. Don t Know 0. NA. NA worthy00: Are people trustworthy? (2000) worthy02: Are people trustworthy? (2002) worthy04: Are people trustworthy? (2004) Generally speaking, would you say that MOST PEOPLE CAN BE TRUSTED or that you CAN'T BE TOO CAREFUL in dealing with people? 1. Most people can be trusted 5. Can't be too careful fair00: Are people fair (2000)? fair02: Are people fair (2000)? fair04: Are people fair (2004)? Do you think most people would try to TAKE ADVANTAGE of you if they got the chance or would they TRY TO BE FAIR? 1. Take advantage 5. Try to be fair. NA help00: Are prople helpful? (2000) help02: Are prople helpful? (2002) help04: Are prople helpful? (2004) Would you say that most of the time people TRY TO BE HELPFUL, or that they are JUST LOOKING OUT FOR THEMSELVES? 1. Try to be helpful 5. Just looking out for themselves

. NA gtrust00: Can gov't be trusted? (2000) gtrust02: Can gov't be trusted? (2002) gtrust04: Can gov't be trusted? (2004) How much of the time do you think you can trust the government in Washington to do what is right -- JUST ABOUT ALWAYS, MOST OF THE TIME, or only SOME OF THE TIME? 1. Just about always 2. Most of the time 3. Only some of the time 4. Never {VOL} Feeling Thermometers : I'd like to get your feelings toward some of our political leaders and other people who are in the news these days. I'll read the name of a person and I'd like you to rate that person using something we call the feeling thermometer. Ratings between 50 degrees and 100 degrees mean that you feel favorable and warm toward the person. Ratings between 0 degrees and 50 degrees mean that you don't feel favorable toward the person and that you don't care too much for that person. You would rate the person at the 50 degree mark if you don't feel particularly warm or cold toward the person. If we come to a person whose name you don't recognize, you don't need to rate that person. Just tell me and we'll move on to the next one. bush00pr: George Bush Thermometer (2000 pre-election) bush00po: George Bush Thermometer (2000 post-election) bush02: George Bush Thermometer (2002) bush04: George Bush Thermometer (2004) nadr00pr: Ralph Nader Thermometer (2000 pre-election) nadr00po: Ralph Nader Thermometer (2000) post-election) nadr02: Ralph Nader Thermometer (2002 ) nadr04: Ralph Nader Thermometer (2004) 0-100 999 MISSING DATA (NO ANSWER, DON'T RECOGNIZE, DON'T KNOW, REFUSED TO ANSWER) Last updated October 10, 2016. 2016 John L. Korey. Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution- Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License.