Political Attitudes during an Election Year: A Report on the 1980 NES Panel Study

This article is based on data from the 1980 National Election Study surveys. It reports findings concerning the rates at which voters become familiar with presidential candidates and their policy positions, trends in public opinion during the 1980 presidential campaign, and the dynamics of individual attitudes that underlie those trends. The impact of political attitudes on the individual vote decision is assessed within the context of a simultaneous equation model. In addition, the net effects of attitudinal distributions on the election outcome are estimated. The analysis yields support for the retrospective voting model and provides no evidence for the contention that Reagan's victory was the result of his policy or ideological positions.

[1]  Philip E. Converse,et al.  Plus ça change…: The New CPS Election Study Panel , 1979, American Political Science Review.

[2]  John E. Jackson Issues, Party Choices, and Presidential Votes , 1975 .

[3]  Benjamin I. Page,et al.  Reciprocal Effects of Policy Preferences, Party Loyalties and the Vote , 1979, American Political Science Review.

[4]  J. Merrill Shanks,et al.  Policy Directions and Presidential Leadership: Alternative Interpretations of the 1980 Presidential Election , 1982, British Journal of Political Science.

[5]  Morris P. Fiorina,et al.  Retrospective voting in American national elections , 1981 .

[6]  Donald E. Stokes Some Dynamic Elements of Contests for the Presidency , 1966, American Political Science Review.

[7]  Richard A. Brody,et al.  Indifference, alientation and rational decisions , 1973 .

[8]  E. Hanushek Statistical methods for social scientists , 1977 .

[9]  Stanley Kelley,et al.  The Simple Act of Voting , 1974 .

[10]  Warren E. Miller,et al.  Ideology in the 1972 Election: Myth or Reality—A Rejoinder , 1976, American Political Science Review.

[11]  Michael W. Gillespie Log-Linear Techniques and the Regression Analysis of Dummy Dependent Variables , 1977 .

[12]  Philip E. Converse,et al.  A Dynamic Simultaneous Equation Model of Electoral Choice , 1979, American Political Science Review.

[13]  Benjamin I. Page Choices and echoes in Presidential elections , 1978 .

[14]  John W. Gorman,et al.  Comment: What Have You Done for Me Lately? Toward An Investment Theory of Voting , 1976, American Political Science Review.