Posted by Ilya Somin:
Where American Jewish Opinon Differs from the National Average:
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_09_13-2009_09_19.shtml#1253132514


   In [1]my previous post, I argued that American Jews are overwhelmingly
   liberal primarily because of their opposition to the religious right.
   In 2005, the American Jewish Committee published[2] Jewish
   Distinctiveness in America, a massive study of the ways in which
   Jewish political opinion (among other variables) differs from the
   national average. It turns out that Jews don't differ very much from
   gentiles on economic policy and government spending issues. But they
   are vastly more liberal on "social issues" such as abortion, sexual
   morality, and the role of religion in public life. Table 65 on pg. 269
   in the AJC summarizes the extent to which Jewish opinion differs from
   the national average on a variety of issues (e.g. - if the difference
   is 5 points, that means that if the national average is 50% support
   for a given view, the Jewish average is either 45% or 55%). On a
   variety of questions relating to government spending and taxes, Jews
   diverge from the national mean by an averageof approximately 7
   percent. The difference on "social welfare" policy questions is even
   smaller (a 4.4% average). And on some of these issues, Jews are
   actually a bit more conservative than the national average rather than
   more liberal. For example, only 38% of Jews support government efforts
   to "reduce income differences," compared to a national average of 43%
   (Table 42.A), and 70% of Jews believe that their income taxes are too
   high (compared to 64% of non-Jews). Most strikingly, only 41% of Jews
   (compared to 52% of gentiles) believe that the government spends "too
   little" on Social Security, despite the fact that a much higher
   percentage of Jews than gentiles are senior citizens (Table 38L).

   There are, of course, some economic and social welfare issues where
   Jews are more liberal than the national average (e.g. - education and
   health care spending), but the differences are relatively small.
   Moreover, Jewish-gentile differences over economic and social welfare
   issues have actually narrowed slightly over the last 30 years, as Jews
   have grown a bit more conservative on these matters (Table 66). The
   average Jew is hardly a thoroughgoing free market advocate; but his or
   her views on economic issues are not much different from those of the
   average gentile.

   In sum, if conservatives and the Republican Party were primarily
   focused on economic and size of government issues, they might attract
   almost as much support from Jews as among gentiles.

   By contrast, there are huge gaps between Jewish opinion and the
   national average on social issues (also from Table 65). In each case,
   Jews are much more liberal than gentiles (there are virtually no
   social issue questions where Jewish opinion differs from gentiles in a
   more conservative direction):

   Abortion: 29% Sexual Morality: 21% Suicide: 18% Civil liberties: 13%

   Each of these totals aggregates results from several different
   questions in the relevant issue area. Some of the results on
   individual questions are also striking. For example 77% of Jews favor
   legalized abortion on demand, compared to only 40% of non-Jews (Table
   12.G). Similarly, only 18% of Jews believe that homosexual sex is
   "always wrong" compared to a national average of 59% (Table 16.C). The
   data also shows that 84% of Jews approve of the Supreme Court's
   rulings forbidding government-sanctioned prayer in public schools,
   compared to only 38% of non-Jews (Table 9.C).

   Overall, the areas where Jewish opinion differs greatly from the
   national average are overwhelmingly social issues emphasized by the
   religious right. As I argued in my last post. It is likely that more
   Jews would be willing to identify as conservative and/or vote
   Republican if conservatism and the Republican Party were not so
   closely identified with right-wing stances on social issues.

   The data in the AJC study is derived from General Social Survey
   questions conducted from 1991 to 2002. I highly doubt that the
   distribution of Jewish-gentile gap has radically altered over the last
   few years, but I can't rule out that possibility without analyzing
   more recent GSS data (which I don't have time to do right now).
   However, if anyone has done such an analysis, I would be happy to link
   to it.

   For now though, the AJC data strongly support my view that the
   overwhelming liberalism of American Jews is largely driven by
   differences with the religious right over social issues. A related
   factor, of course, is a cultural distaste for the religious right that
   leads many secular Jews to fear and dislike them over and above the
   specific details of the disagreements between the two groups.

References

   1. http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_09_13-2009_09_19.shtml#1253077005
   2. 
http://www.ajc.org/atf/cf/%7B42D75369-D582-4380-8395-D25925B85EAF%7D/JewishDistinctivenessAmerica_TS_April2005.pdf

_______________________________________________
Volokh mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.powerblogs.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/volokh

Reply via email to