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The Tea Party and the 2012 presidential election

    1. [1] California State University
    2. [2] University of California
  • Localización: Electoral Studies: An international Journal, ISSN 0261-3794, Nº 40, 2015, págs. 500-508
  • Idioma: inglés
  • Texto completo no disponible (Saber más ...)
  • Resumen
    • Using both the 2012 American National Election Study and the 2012 Cooperative Congressional Election Study, we examine the Tea Party movement's role in crystallizing attitudes and shaping voting behavior in the 2012 elections. The data show that, compared to other Republicans, Tea Party sympathizers were notably more hostile to Obama, more receptive to bogus notions about his origins and religion, and more conservative across a broad range of issues and issue dimensions—including those related to racial and ethnic minorities. Voters' opinions of the Tea Party were linked to their presidential vote choice directly as well as through their association with the core values, opinions, and attitudes that underlie opinions of the Tea Party. Tea Party sympathizers form the Republican coalition's largest, most loyal, and most active component, so their opinions and beliefs help to explain why national politics in the United States is currently stalemated on so many major issues.


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