Main-Street Republicans, Hard-Pressed Democrats, Bystanders and Post Moderns: The Political Typology
On the left, Solid Liberals express diametrically opposing views from the Staunch Conservatives on virtually every issue. While Solid Liberals are predominantly white, minorities make up greater shares of New Coalition Democrats — who include nearly equal numbers 0f whites, African Americans and Hispanics — and Hard-Pressed Democrats, who are about a third African American. Unlike Solid Liberals, both of these last two groups are highly religious and socially conservative. New Coalition Democrats are distinguished by their upbeat attitudes in the face of economic struggles.
Independents have played a determinative role in the last three national elections. But the three groups in the center of the political typology have very little in common, aside from their avoidance of partisan labels. Libertarians and Post-Moderns are largely white, well-educated and affluent. They also share a relatively secular outlook on some social issues, including homosexuality and abortion. But Republican-oriented Libertarians are far more critical of government, less supportive of environmental regulations, and more supportive of business than are Post-Moderns, most of whom lean Democratic.
Disaffecteds, the other main group of independents, are financially stressed and cynical about politics. Most lean to the Republican Party, though they differ from the core Republican groups in their support for increased government aid to the poor. Another group in the center, Bystanders, largely consign themselves to the political sidelines and for the most part are not included in this analysis.
These are the principal findings of the political typology study by the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press, which sorts Americans into cohesive groups based on values, political beliefs, and party affiliation. The new study is based on two surveys with a combined sample of 3,029 adults, conducted Feb. 22-Mar. 14, 2011 and a smaller callback survey conducted April 7-10, 2011 with 1,432 of the same respondents.
Read the full report at Pew Research, take a quiz to find out which typology group you belong to, watch a video in which Pew Research staff describe the report and use an interactive feature to analyze the groups at the 2011 Political Typology page at people-press.org.
Pages: 1 · 2
More Articles
- Smell the Insidious Violence
- In Minnesota, Democratic Grandmothers Gather Data About Their Neighbors
- CultureWatch — The Patriarch: The Remarkable Life and Turbulent Times of Joseph P. Kennedy; The Mysteries and International Negotiating of Midsomer Murders and Kidnap and Ransom
- Cuba Today
- A Changing Relationship to Visual Truth
- Culture and Political Watch, The Spirit of Compromise: Why Governing Demands It and Campaigning Undermines It
- Eleanor Roosevelt's Fight for Labor Rights Lives On
- The Ever-Shifting Sea Ice: Arctic Drilling Postponed Until 2013
- Dirty Little Not-So-Secrets: The National Political Discourse
- One Woman's Reaction: US Representative Todd Akin on Rape and Pregnancy






