Sunday, May 12, 2024

Wrong track, right time

 Back in 1971, an Opinion Research Corporation survey asked "Do you feel that things in this country are generally going in the right direction today, or do you feel that things have pretty seriously gotten off on the wrong track?"  The question has been asked many times since then, by a number of survey organizations.  I wrote about it in February 2017, and then forgot about it.  But I recently rediscovered the question and in this post I'll will update the figures and look at several periods in more detail.



As I observed in my previous post, people were not especially discontented at the time of Trump's election--only 31% said we were going in the right direction and 62% said we were on the wrong track, but those figures are close to the sample averages of 34% and 58%.  Moreover, there was no downward trend (actually a small positive correlation with time in 1971-2016), which goes against the popular idea that Trump's election was a response to a long period of growing  popular frustration.  The question hasn't been asked as frequently in the Trump and Obama administrations as it was at times in the past, but it seems that opinion generally became more positive, despite political turmoil and the Covid pandemic, up to the last time it was asked (January 2022).  

Opinions hit a low in December 2008, but since that time the most striking thing is that they've varied in a pretty narrow range--the figure shows the first and third quartiles, and 33 out of the 40 observations since March 2009 have been in between those.  I checked a few of the surveys, and opinions seem to have become more closely related to partisanship than they were in the past--supporters of the president's party are more likely to say we are on the right track--which may help to explain the decline in variation.  

More generally, opinions are clearly related to economic conditions, but can't be fully explained by them.  Opinions also seem to be related to presidential approval--see the highs during the first Gulf War and early in Obama's presidency--but have held up under two unpopular presidents.  I'll look at the relationships in a future post, and see if there is any pattern in the residuals.  

[Data from the Roper Center for Public Opinion Research]


No comments:

Post a Comment