articleAmerican Political Science ReviewMay 1, 2008Closed access

The Strength of Issues: Using Multiple Measures to Gauge Preference Stability, Ideological Constraint, and Issue Voting

Massachusetts Institute of Technology · Stanford University

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Abstract

A venerable supposition of American survey research is that the vast majority of voters have incoherent and unstable preferences about political issues, which in turn have little impact on vote choice. We demonstrate that these findings are manifestations of measurement error associated with individual survey items. First, we show that averaging a large number of survey items on the same broadly defined issue area—for example, government involvement in the economy, or moral issues—eliminates a large amount of measurement error and reveals issue preferences that are well structured and stable. This stability increases steadily as the number of survey items increases and can approach that of party…

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756
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Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Voting
  • Presidential system
  • Explanatory power
  • Constraint (computer-aided design)
  • Preference
  • Identification (biology)
  • Ideology
  • Stability (learning theory)
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Peace, Justice and strong institutions
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