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Abstract

Volume 7 • Number 2

Summer 2007


 

Research Articles

ROBERT S. ERIKSON
Columbia University
GERALD C. WRIGHT
Indiana University
JOHN P. McIVER
University of Colorado


Measuring the Public's Ideological Preferences in the 50 States: Survey Responses Versus Roll Call Data

For some time now, our team has reported states' ideological preferences as the mean ideological self-identification of respondents in CBS News/New York Times polls (Wright, Erikson, and McIver 1985; Erikson, Wright, and McIver 1993). Recently, Brace et al. (2002, 2004) have reported measuring state ideological self-identification using data from the American National Election Studies (NES) and the General Social Survey (GSS) surveys. Using these two independent datasets, our two teams have both concluded that aggregated state-level ideological preferences are overwhelmingly stable over time, at least in recent decades. Theory does not demand that such ideology be constant. In fact, we know that ideology's sister variable, state-level party identification, does vary over time both in absolute and relative terms (Erikson, Wright, and McIver 2006). But there can be little doubt that when measuring state ideological preferences as the mean self-report of citizen preferences, the absolute and relative positions of the states have been very stable from year to year, going back at least to the mid-1970s. 

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