Posted by Jay Livingston
After the New Hampshire Democratic primary, there was some talk of the Bradley Effect: the black candidate gets a smaller percentage of the actual vote than predicted in the polls. Apparently, norms of political correctness keep people from telling a stranger (i.e., the pollster) they’re not going to vote for the black guy; the privacy of the polling booth removes that social pressure.
You can come at this problem from a second angle by asking not just, “What do you think?” but “What do other people around here think?”
Do you think most people you know would vote for a presidential candidate who is black, or not? | |||||||||
Would | Would Not | Unsure | | | |||||
% | % | % | | | |||||
65 | 21 | 14 | | ||||||
Would you personally vote for a presidential candidate who is black, or not? | |||||||||
Would | Would Not | Unsure | | | |||||
% | % | % | | | |||||
90 | 6 | 4 | |||||||
The same effect holds for women candidates.
Do you think most people you know would vote for a presidential candidate who is a woman, or not? | |||||||||
Would | Would Not | Unsure | | | |||||
% | % | % | | | |||||
56 | 34 | 10 | | ||||||
Would you personally vote for a presidential candidate who is a woman, or not? | |||||||||
Would | Would Not | Unsure | | | |||||
% | % | % | | | |||||
81 | 15 | 4 | |
Note that 2 ½ times as many people (15% to 6%) said they wouldn’t vote for a woman as said they wouldn’t vote for a black. The same discrepancy holds for how they thought others would vote. About one in five thought their fellow Americans wouldn't vote for a black, but a third of the sample thought that their acquaintances wouldn't vote for a woman.
Data are from a CBS News/New York Times Poll. Jan. 9-12, 2008. N=995 registered voters nationwide.
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