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Citizen Attitudes about Divided Government in the United States: Does the Public Really Care?

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govern (142), divid (119), prefer (112), control (110), parti (101), democrat (75), split (69), 2004 (67), polit (65), republican (59), survey (58), unifi (57), congress (57), question (51), 2000 (49), partisan (46), ticket (46), like (44), matter (42), american (36), presid (36),
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Name: Southern Political Science Association
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http://www.spsa.net


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MLA Citation:

Craig, Stephen., Hill, David. and Richards, Scott. "Citizen Attitudes about Divided Government in the United States: Does the Public Really Care?" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Southern Political Science Association, TBA, TBA, Jan 05, 2006 <Not Available>. 2009-05-25 <http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p68426_index.html>

APA Citation:

Craig, S. C., Hill, D. and Richards, S. , 2006-01-05 "Citizen Attitudes about Divided Government in the United States: Does the Public Really Care?" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Southern Political Science Association, TBA, TBA Online <APPLICATION/PDF>. 2009-05-25 from http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p68426_index.html

Publication Type: Conference Paper/Unpublished Manuscript

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Associated Document Available Southern Political Science Association

Document Type: application/pdf
Page count: 46
Word count: 11410
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Citizen Attitudes about Divided Government in the United States: Does the Public Really Care? David Hill Department of Political Science Valdosta State University Valdosta GA 31698 davhill@valdosta.edu Stephen C. Craig Department of Political Science University of Florida 234 Anderson Hall Gainesville Fl 32611 sccraig@ufl.edu Scott Richards Bureau of Economic and Business Research University of Florida Gainesville Fl 32611 scottr@bebr.ufl.edu Abstract: Although divided government has become something close to the norm in American politics some scholars believe that this is
(.575) ----- -1.386 (1.074) Constant -2.476 -2.779 N -2 Log Likelihood 242 254 X2 130.218 156.751 30.69** 25.312** Standard errors are in the parentheses *=p<.10; **p<.05 Source: 2004 University of Florida Survey Research Center Statewide Survey.


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