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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1920/2868

Title: Partisan Patterns in the Aftermath of Terror: Civil Liberties, Spending and the Centrality of Fear
Author(s): Mayer, Jeremy D.
Koizumi, Naoru
LaPorte, Todd
Keywords: civil liberties
partisan pattern
terrorism
critical infrastructure
government spending
Mayer
LaPorte
Koizumi
Jeremy D. Mayer
Naoru Koizumi
Todd LaPorte
SPP
School of Public Policy
GMU
George Mason University
Issue Date: 9-Nov-2007
Series/Report no.: GMU School of Public Policy Faculty Working Papers
4
Abstract: Among the most reliable patterns in American partisan, public opinion is the consistent antipathy towards higher government spending exhibited by Republicans compared to Democrats. This gap in public opinion has grown, not shrunk in the recent era. Another consistent divide in partisan public opinion is the tendency by Democrats to favor civil liberties more than "law and order" Republican. Our paper examines whether American citizens follow these partisan patterns in the context of the war on terror. Specifically, do Democrats and Republicans remain divided in predictable ways when asked about spending more to protect our civil infrastructure against terrorism, and about limiting civil liberties in order to more effectively fight terrorism? We find that partisanship does not influence views on sacrificing civil liberties in the fight on terror, and is less influential than fear of terrorism on the spending questions.
Description: A paper presented at the American Political Science Association’s Annual Meeting, August 31, 2006, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/1920/2868
Appears in Collections:SPP Faculty Working Papers

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