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Partisan Preference and Income Redistribution: Cross-National and Cross-Sexual Results*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 November 2009

Norman Frohlich
Affiliation:
University of Manitoba
Irvin Boschmann
Affiliation:
University of Manitoba

Abstract

The relationships between attitudes toward income redistribution and partisan preferences are examined and contrasted in Canadian and American samples of college students. In both samples evidence is found that there is a strong relationship between the variables among males and an absence of a relationship among females. In Canada, support for income redistribution is strongly positively correlated with support for the New Democratic party, positively correlated with support for the Liberal party, and strongly negatively correlated with support for the Progressive Conservative party. In the United States support for income redistribution is strongly positively correlated with support for the Democratic party and strongly negatively correlated with support for the Republican party. Cross-national differences are also found between Canadian and American subjects, Canadian subjects having significantly lower variance among party supporters regarding this issue. Some implications of the results for research in the area of sex differences in politics and the influence of economic concerns on political behaviour are discussed briefly.

Résumé

Au Canada, favoriser la redistribution des revenus va très étroitement de pair avec un appui au Nouveau Parti démocratique et, dans un moindre mesure.au Parti libéral, mais ne correspond absolument pas à un appui au Parti progressiste-conservateur. Aux États-Unis, il y a aussi de très fortes corrélations entre l'attitude face à la redistribution des revenus et le parti qu'on appuie, une attitude favorable à cette redistribution se retrouvant chez les démocrates mais non chez les républicans. Parmi les différences remarquables entre les profils canadiens et américains sur la question, on note une attitude nettement plus homogène chez les partisans canadiens. L'article se termine par une discussion des rapports d'une part entre le sexe et la politique et d'autre part entre les enjeux économiques et les comportements politiques.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Canadian Political Science Association (l'Association canadienne de science politique) and/et la Société québécoise de science politique 1986

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