In my last post, I suggested that opinion differences between elites and the public didn't fall into the standard left/right pattern; this post will take a more systematic look. The Chicago Council of Foreign Relations/Chicago Council on Global Affairs has a long-running series of surveys of foreign policy elites and the general public which include questions on the importance of different foreign policy goals. The figure shows the importance that self-described liberals and conservatives in the general public put on these goals in 2016 (3 represents "very important," 2 "somewhat important" and 1 "not important at all").
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The correlation is -.37: that is, the ones that are important to liberals tend to be less important to conservatives, and vice versa. The figure suggests that they fall into two groups: one which is strongly related to ideology (the ones that fall in a downward sloping line) and another on which there is a consensus that they are very important. These are "preventing the spread of nuclear weapons," "combatting international terrorism," "protecting the jobs of American workers," and "attaining US energy independence."
There is a moderate positive correlation between elite and liberal ratings of importance (0.43), and essentially no correlation between elite and conservative ratings. The figure shows elite and liberal ratings:
The list of possible goals offered changes from time to time, so I will show the liberal/elite comparisons for a couple of other years.
In 2014, they asked about "strengthening the United Nations"; liberals in the public regarded it as a lot more important than elites did. As in 2016, elites rated protecting American jobs as less important and maintaining military power and defending allies security as more important then liberals did. As in 2016, both rated "controlling and reducing illegal immigration" low, but it was substantially lower for elites than for liberals.
The 2004 survey also included a question on protecting jobs, and again that was less important to elites than to liberals in the public. Strengthening the UN was also included, and was rated higher by liberals, although the gap was smaller than in 2014. Illegal immigration was also included: liberals rated it as of moderate importance, while elites rated it low. On the other side, elites rated "helping to improve the standard of living of less developed nations" as a lot more important than the public did.
Finally, turning to changes in priorities, here are the ratings for liberals and conservatives on the six items that were included in both 2004 and 2016 (blue is 2004, red is 2016). Movements on the horizontal axis represent change among conservatives, while movements on the vertical axis represent change among liberals. Military power and illegal immigration became less important to liberals and more important to conservatives, while "combatting world hunger" become less important to conservatives and stayed about the same among liberals. The other three stayed about the same for both.
I won't show the figure for elites, just say that hunger become less important, maintaining military superiority more important, and the others stayed about the same.
So elite opinions are different from liberal opinions--and not in the sense of being farther to the left on all issues. Elites have consistently rated protecting jobs and controlling and reducing illegal immigration as relatively unimportant. Elite priorities also can't be characterized as straightforward internationalism: they rate defending allies as important, but strengthening the UN as not very important.
What's the source of the differences? One possibility is demographic differences: elites are more educated, and more likely to be white, male, and older. But these factors don't account for much of the differences in opinion. Another possibility is factual knowledge: e. g., elites will know more about how close other nations are to getting nuclear weapons. Then there are ideas about how things work--e. g., elites will be more aware of economists' view that protecting domestic jobs will have the cost of reducing our standard of living. You could also add values, but these tend to go along with ideas about how things work: e. g., that a higher standard of living will make less developed nations more stable and more peaceful, so helping them to achieve a higher standard of living is a matter of enlightened self-interest. It's hard to measure "ideas about how things work" but it's safe to say that some combination of knowledge, experience, and interactions within elite groups may combine to produce a distinct viewpoint. I offer more thoughts about the difference between elite and popular priorities on illegal immigration in this paper.
[Data from the Roper Center for Public Opinion]
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