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Polarized Opinion in the States: Partisan Differences in Approval Ratings of Governors, Senators, and George W. Bush

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Abstract:

A new set of multiple, state-level surveys is used to examine the sources of variation across states and offices in the magnitude of partisan differences in the job approval ratings of the president, each of the senators, and the governor.

Most Common Document Word Stems:

r (169), state (155), senat (143), approv (135), d (132), governor (103), partisan (99), rate (87), parti (84), bush (77), percent (63), republican (57), democrat (52), averag (48), tabl (45), differ (45), polar (44), point (39), survey (37), level (35), nation (34),
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Association:
Name: The Midwest Political Science Association
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http://www.indiana.edu/~mpsa/


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MLA Citation:

Jacobson, Gary. "Polarized Opinion in the States: Partisan Differences in Approval Ratings of Governors, Senators, and George W. Bush" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the The Midwest Political Science Association, Palmer House Hilton, Chicago, Illinois, Apr 20, 2006 <Not Available>. 2009-05-25 <http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p141108_index.html>

APA Citation:

Jacobson, G. C. , 2006-04-20 "Polarized Opinion in the States: Partisan Differences in Approval Ratings of Governors, Senators, and George W. Bush" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the The Midwest Political Science Association, Palmer House Hilton, Chicago, Illinois Online <APPLICATION/PDF>. 2009-05-25 from http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p141108_index.html

Publication Type: Conference Paper/Unpublished Manuscript
Abstract: A new set of multiple, state-level surveys is used to examine the sources of variation across states and offices in the magnitude of partisan differences in the job approval ratings of the president, each of the senators, and the governor.

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Associated Document Available The Midwest Political Science Association
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Associated Document Available Political Research Online

Document Type: application/pdf
Page count: 32
Word count: 9965
Text sample:
Polarized Opinion in the States: Partisan Differences in Approval Ratings of Governors Senators and George W. Bush Gary C. Jacobson University of California San Diego Prepared for delivery at the Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association Chicago Illinois April 20-23 2006. Abstract George W. Bush has provoked the widest partisan differences in job approval ratings of any president since surveys first began asking the question more than seventy years ago. A new set of state-level surveys conducted
York Times Time Los Angeles Times and ABC News/Washington Post polls over the same month period. The average of these media polls ranged from 39.0 to 44.0 percent approving with a mean of 41.7 percent. The average for SurveyUSA was 40.8 percent. The correlation between the monthly averages of these national polls with SurveyUSA’s nationally-weighted results over the 9 monthly data points is .97. In sum I found no reason to believe that the quality and accuracy of the


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