From Voter ID to Party ID: how political parties affect perceptions of election fraud in the U.S. Elect. Stud. 35, 24-32.Beaulieu, Emily A. (2014). From voter ID to party ID: How political parties affect perceptions of electoral fraud in the United States. Manuscript, University of ...
How does political ideology affect political communities? How has television influenced the power of political parties in the U.S.? How can a special interest group have a positive role in politics? How did the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act affect campaign funding and spending?
How is political ideology different from party identity? How do sociologists differentiate between sex and gender? How does political ideology affect the national debt? What role did feminism play in the development of political thought? Why are political parties considered an important part of a dem...
Political parties form around specific platforms and promote candidates who will back those platforms. Not all members of a party will agree with each other on every issue, but they more closely align on various issues than they would with members of another party. ...
(albeit declining) support throughout these years, and thus the balance of power did not change. The party survived many competitors and street protests and had no major splits over the years which could have opened the door to an electoral challenge. Overall, the party faced relatively weak ...
She lacked elite support and did poorly in the polls. That’s not to say that women are doing great in this field; they’re not, as a group. But the fact that concerns over electability also affect Booker and Castro after Obama won big majorities is interesting to me. Perhaps a ...
This, however, was not the case. The effect of school funding attitudes did not differ among people primed with school vs. control images (B ϭ 0.27, P Ͼ 0.45). Instead, the results appear consistent with a priming account. Although attitudes toward taxes and parental status influenced ...
In the aftermath of the 2020 election, Republican lawmakers have pushed new voting restrictions in nearly every state. From making it harder to cast ballots early to increasing the frequency of voter roll purges, at least 25 new restrictive voting laws have been enacted, with more potentially...
NAFTA went into effect under the Clinton administration in 1994. The purpose of the deal was to boost trade within North America between Canada, the United States, and Mexico. It also aimed to get rid of trade barriers between the three parties, as well as most taxes and tariffs on goods ...
marital status, household structure, income, wealth, education, and religion and to see how these are changing over time. Birth and death rates are also used to understand if a population is growing and how this might affect economic growth, employment, and government programs like Social Securit...