1. The Impact of Labor Endorsements: Union Members and the 1980 Presidential Vote.
- Author
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Patton, David B. and Marrone, John J.
- Subjects
POLITICAL participation of labor unions ,PRESIDENTIAL elections ,LABOR unions ,UNITED States politics & government ,POLITICAL campaigns ,UNITED States political parties ,VOTING ,POLITICAL candidates - Abstract
This article cites a study on the impact of labor endorsements on union members and presidential elections. One of the most interesting findings of the survey was the conservative plurality for seven out of 10 campaign issues, especially four of the live dealing with government spending or regulation. When these issues were cross-tabulated with presidential vote, all 10 showed an association between the conservative position and a vote for presidential candidate Ronald Reagan. When six of these 10 issues were combined to produce a conservative/liberal index and this index was cross-tabulated with presidential vote, a strong association was found. In other words, people scoring on the conservative end of the campaign issue index were likely to vote for Reagan, and people scoring on the liberal end were likely to vote for Carter. The evidence is strong enough to support the conclusion that in the 1980 presidential elections, issue positions had greater impact on union members' vote choice than did organization endorsements.
- Published
- 1984