Grand Old Tea Party
Tea Partiers are extremely conservative, almost all of them voted for
McCain, and they make up a third of the GOP
By Alan Abramowitz

Salon/APA key question raised by the spread of Tea Party protests and
the emergence of Tea Party candidates in numerous House, Senate, and
gubernatorial elections is whether this movement represents a new
force in American politics or whether it is simply the latest, and
perhaps the noisiest, manifestation of the long-term rightward shift
of the Republican Party—a shift that can be seen as part of a larger
trend toward increasing partisan polarization in American politics.

While several million individuals may have taken part in Tea Party
protests or contributed money to Tea Party organizations or candidates
since the movement first appeared on the political scene in early
2009, these active participants clearly constitute only a small
fraction of a much larger group of Tea Party sympathizers from whom
the activists are recruited. I will concentrate here on describing Tea
Party supporters among the American public by using data from a
national survey conducted in June of 2010 by NBC News and the Wall
Street Journal.

I used two questions from the NBC/Wall Street Journal poll to measure
support for the Tea Party movement: one asking respondents to rate the
Tea Party movement on a five-point scale with responses ranging from
very favorable to very unfavorable and the other asking them to
express their feelings about voting for a Tea Party candidate on a
five-point scale with responses ranging from enthusiastic to very
uncomfortable. Responses to the two questions were strongly related so
I combined them to form a Tea Party support scale with scores ranging
from 1 (least supportive) to 9 (most supportive). Overall, 18 percent
of the survey respondents were classified as supporters of the Tea
Party movement based on scores of 8-9 on the scale.

Tea Party supporters were overwhelmingly white, somewhat older than
the electorate as a whole and somewhat more religious than the
electorate as a whole. However, it is when we turn to political
attitudes that the differences between Tea Party supporters and the
general public become most striking.

Although some Tea Party leaders have tried to stress the movement’s
independence from the Republican Party, supporters of the Tea Party
movement overwhelmingly identified with the Republican Party and
reported voting for Republican candidates. Eighty percent of Tea Party
supporters were Republican identifiers or independents who leaned
toward the Republican Party and 54 percent were strong Republican
identifiers. And Tea Party supporters definitely were not political
newcomers—93 percent reported voting in the 2008 presidential election
and 96 percent of these Tea Party voters cast their ballots for John
McCain.

With respect to ideology and issue positions, Tea Party supporters
were far to the right of the overall electorate. Fully 84 percent of
strong Tea Party supporters described themselves as conservative and
54 percent described themselves as very conservative while only 41
percent of all members of the public described themselves as
conservative and only 20 percent described themselves as very
conservative. And compared with the public, Tea Party supporters were
also much more likely to take the conservative side on a wide range of
issues including immigration, health care, offshore oil drilling,
social security, eliminating federal agencies such as the Department
of Education, and reducing regulation of major industries.

Given the intense opposition of Tea Party supporters to President
Obama’s policies, the Tea Party movement is not likely to fade away as
long as he remains in the White House. And since Tea Party supporters
make up over a third of Republican identifiers and almost certainly
make up a much larger proportion of active Republicans, the Tea Party
movement clearly has the potential to strongly influence Republican
congressional and presidential primaries in 2012. Any serious
Republican presidential contender will have to find a way to appeal to
Tea Party supporters. The danger, of course, is that this may make it
very difficult for the eventual Republican nominee to appeal to more
moderate swing voters in the general election.

More:
http://www.salon.com/news/politics/war_room/2010/10/20/tea_party_gop_abramowitz

-- 
Together, we can change the world, one mind at a time.
Have a great day,
Tommy

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