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Chapter 11.1 Public Opinion

Chapter 11.1 Public Opinion. Forming Public Opinion Public opinion includes the ideas and attitudes that most people hold about elected officials, candidates,

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Page 1: Chapter 11.1 Public Opinion. Forming Public Opinion Public opinion includes the ideas and attitudes that most people hold about elected officials, candidates,

Chapter 11.1Public Opinion

Page 2: Chapter 11.1 Public Opinion. Forming Public Opinion Public opinion includes the ideas and attitudes that most people hold about elected officials, candidates,

Forming Public Opinion Public opinion includes the ideas and

attitudes that most people hold about elected officials, candidates, gov’t and political issues. It helps shape the decisions of every president as well as the timing of the decisions.

Page 3: Chapter 11.1 Public Opinion. Forming Public Opinion Public opinion includes the ideas and attitudes that most people hold about elected officials, candidates,

continued Public opinion is not uniform. Many shades

of opinions exist on most issues. Enough people must hold a particular opinion to make gov’t officials listen to them.

People’s backgrounds and life experiences influence their opinions.

Page 4: Chapter 11.1 Public Opinion. Forming Public Opinion Public opinion includes the ideas and attitudes that most people hold about elected officials, candidates,

continued TV, radio, newspapers, magazines,

recordings, movies and books are called the mass media because they communicate broadly to masses of people. Issues and events the mass media cover and the way they cover them affect people’s attitudes.

Page 5: Chapter 11.1 Public Opinion. Forming Public Opinion Public opinion includes the ideas and attitudes that most people hold about elected officials, candidates,

continued Political leaders and public officials

influence public opinion. They state their views in the mass media, hoping to persuade people to support their positions.

People who share a point of view about an issue may form an interest group. The group works to persuade people and officials toward their point of view.

Page 6: Chapter 11.1 Public Opinion. Forming Public Opinion Public opinion includes the ideas and attitudes that most people hold about elected officials, candidates,

Components of Public Opinion Experts often describe public opinion in terms of

direction, intensity and stability. Direction refers to whether opinions on a topic are

positive, negative, for or against. Intensity refers to the strength of opinion on an

issue Stability means how firmly people hold their

views. Public opinion on candidates is relativity unstable.

Page 7: Chapter 11.1 Public Opinion. Forming Public Opinion Public opinion includes the ideas and attitudes that most people hold about elected officials, candidates,

Measuring Public Opinion Election results give a broad measure of

public opinion. A more accurate measure comes from asking people to answer questions in a survey, or public opinion poll.

Elected officials use polls to monitor public opinion. Most presidents have a pollster – a specialist whose job is to conduct polls regularly.

Page 8: Chapter 11.1 Public Opinion. Forming Public Opinion Public opinion includes the ideas and attitudes that most people hold about elected officials, candidates,

continued Polling organizations questions people

selected at random from all over the U.S. To present a fairly accurate picture of public opinion, a sample must reflect the characteristics of the entire population. The questions must be fair and unbiased.

Page 9: Chapter 11.1 Public Opinion. Forming Public Opinion Public opinion includes the ideas and attitudes that most people hold about elected officials, candidates,

continued Some people believe polls support

democracy by allowing officials to keep in touch with citizens’ opinions on issues. Critics claim polling makes officials more concerned with following the public than in leading.

Page 10: Chapter 11.1 Public Opinion. Forming Public Opinion Public opinion includes the ideas and attitudes that most people hold about elected officials, candidates,

continued Many people worry that polls distort elections.

During campaigns, the media constantly report who is ahead at the moment, taking the focus off the issues. Also, some people may decide not to vote if they think the outcome has been determined.

The Framers succeeded in creating a representative democracy that responds to the wishes of the people yet is shaped by other influences as well.