Pew study: Political divide now outweighs, racial, class values gap

A Pew Research study finds that America has never been more polarized, and more than ever, it’s politics, not race or class, that divides us.

The study, which looks at trends in American values-based beliefs from 1987 through 2012 finds that the “values gap” between Republicans and Democrats has never been wider. As the poll’s top-line memo states: “Republicans are most distinguished by their increasingly minimalist views about the role of government and lack of support for environmentalism. Democrats have become more socially liberal and secular. Republicans and Democrats are most similar in their level of political engagement.”

Among the key findings:

From the poll writeup by Pew researcher Andrew Kohut:

Republicans and Democrats are furthest apart in their opinions about the social safety net. There are partisan differences of 35 points or more in opinions about the government’s responsibility to care for the poor, whether the government should help more needy people if it means adding to the debt and whether the government should guarantee all citizens enough to eat and a place to sleep.

On all three measures, the percentage of Republicans asserting a government responsibility to aid the poor has fallen in recent years to 25-year lows.

Just 40 percent of Republicans agree that “It is the responsibility of the government to take care of people who can’t take care of themselves,” down 18 points since 2007. In three surveys during the George W. Bush administration, no fewer than half of Republicans said the government had a responsibility to care for those unable to care for themselves. In 1987, during the Ronald Reagan’s second term, 62 percent expressed this view.

Over the past two decades, the public consensus in favor of tougher environmental restrictions has weakened, also primarily because of changing opinions among Republicans.

For the first time in a Pew Research Center political values survey, only about half of Republicans (47 percent) agree that “there needs to be stricter laws and regulations to protect the environment.” This represents a decline of 17 points since 2009 and a fall of nearly 40 points, from 86 percent, since 1992.

The partisan gap over this measure was modest two decades ago. Today, roughly twice as many Democrats as Republicans say stricter environmental laws and regulations are needed (93 percent vs. 47 percent).

At the same time the poll finds that Democrats have shifted in their values too, though less dramatically than Republicans. Today, the number of Democrats who say the “never doubt the existence of God” has fallen 11 points in a decade, to 77 percent (76 percent for independents) and the percentage of white Democrats who express no doubt on God’s existence has declined 17 percent, to 68 percent.

Democrats have also shifted to become more favorable toward immigration, and toward alternatives to traditional marriage. Today, just 6 in 10 Democrats say they have “old fashioned values about family and marriage,” down from 70 percent in 2007 and from 86 percent in 1987. For Republicans, that number is closer to 9 in 10, with 88 percent of respondents professing old fashioned values about marriage.

On the question of “doing whatever is necessary to improve the position of minorities,” including support for race-based preferences, just over half of Democrats are in support (52 percent), which is an 11 percent increase just since 2007 in those who say “we should make every effort to improve the position of blacks and other minorities, even if it means giving them preferential treatment.” For Republicans, just 12 percent agree with that statement, a stable percentage over time, which means the gap between Republicans and Democrats on the issue of racial preferences has grown from 18 percentage points in 1987, to 40 points today.

How the numbers affect the political divide

When it comes to the 2012 election, the Pew survey finds that swing voters are closer to Obama voters on the question of whether labor unions have too much power, and they and Obama voters share a smaller tendency than Romney voters to say they “admire rich people” (just 22 percent of Obama voters and swing voters have admiration for the rich, versus 38 percent of Romney voters.) And while 62 percent of Obama voters believe government should help the needy, even if it means more debt, swing voters are closer to Romney voters on this question, with just 27 percent of swing voters and 19 percent of Romney voters agreeing with that statement.

When it comes to helping the needy, 72 percent of Obama voters believe it is the government’s responsibility to take care of those who can’t help themselves, versus 48 percent of swing voters and just 41 percent of Romney voters, while on the question of whether society should make every effort to improve the condition of minorities, 49 percent of Obama voters agree, versus just 23 percent of swing voters and just 9 percent of those saying they are certain to vote for Mitt Romney.

Lastly, majorities across the political spectrum believe there is too much power concentrated in the hands of a few companies, according to the survey, but that belief is held by 89 percent of Obama voters, 75 percent of swing voeters, and a smaller 60 percent of Romney voters. Romney voters much more likely to believe that government regulation of business “does more harm than good” — 85 percent versus 56 percent of swing voters and just 32 percent of Obama voters, and 91 percent of Romney voters are concerned that government has become too involved in healthcare, versus 64 percent of swing voters and just 29 percent of Obama voters.

The racial divide unchanged

While the partisan gap is widening, the Pew survey found that values differences between Americans of different ages, education levels, incomes and races haven’t changed much since 1987.

Racial differences remain, particularly on issues of the role of government, but the gap between blacks, whites and Hispanics has remained stable over the decades, with African-Americans and Hispanics consistently remaining more confident in the government’s ability to solve problems, and believing more strongly in the social safety net, and a larger role of government than whites.

In the survey, 62 percent of black respondents agreed with the statement, “we should make every possible effort to improve the position of blacks and other minorities, even if it means giving them preferential treatment,” versus just 22 percent of whites. In 1987, the gap was 64 percent versus 16 percent, a minor change.

And while 78 percent of blacks say the government “should guarantee every citizen enough to eat and a place to sleep” — a figure just 2 percent below where it was 25 years ago, only 52 percent of whites agree, down from 58 percent in 1987.

The survey also found:

And the percentage of black and white respondents who said they have “old fashioned values about marriage and family” is nearly identical (69 percent of blacks and 72 percent of whites) — and blacks are more likely to say women should “return to their traditional role in society.” Still, the gaps between races on these issues has remained virtually unchanged in 25 years, while the partisan divide has grown substantially.

Follow Joy Reid on Twitter at @thereidreport

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