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Why Trust Matters
Why Trust Matters
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A01=Marc J. Hetherington
Al Gore
Americans
Author_Marc J. Hetherington
Barry Goldwater
Bert Lance
Big government
Bill Clinton
Bipartisanship
Branch Davidians
Brown v. Board of Education
Bureaucrat
Bush tax cuts
Category=JPA
Center on Budget and Policy Priorities
Centre-right politics
Citizens (Spanish political party)
Compassionate conservatism
Distrust
Economic interventionism
Elite
Enron
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
George McGovern
George W. Bush
Government
Government failure
Government shutdown in the United States
Government spending
Great Society
Harry and Louise
Health care reform
Ideology
Illegal immigration
Jimmy Carter
John F. Kennedy
Landslide victory
Liberalism
Liberalism (book)
Lyndon B. Johnson
Medicaid
Midterm election
National security
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New Frontier
Paul Begala
Percentage
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Political suicide
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Public opinion
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Racism
Reason Rally (2016)
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Socialized medicine
Symbolic racism
Tax
Tax cut
Term limit
Voter turnout
Voting Rights Act of 1965
Walter Dean Burnham
War on Poverty
Watergate scandal
Welfare
Welfare reform
Product details
- ISBN 9780691128702
- Weight: 28g
- Dimensions: 152 x 235mm
- Publication Date: 15 Oct 2006
- Publisher: Princeton University Press
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Paperback
American public policy has become demonstrably more conservative since the 1960s. Neither Jimmy Carter nor Bill Clinton was much like either John F. Kennedy or Lyndon Johnson. The American public, however, has not become more conservative. Why, then, the right turn in public policy? Using both individual and aggregate level survey data, Marc Hetherington shows that the rapid decline in Americans' political trust since the 1960s is critical to explaining this puzzle. As people lost faith in the federal government, the delivery system for most progressive policies, they supported progressive ideas much less. The 9/11 attacks increased such trust as public attention focused on security, but the effect was temporary. Specifically, Hetherington shows that, as political trust declined, so too did support for redistributive programs, such as welfare and food stamps, and race-targeted programs. While the presence of race in a policy area tends to make political trust important for whites, trust affects policy preferences in other, non-race-related policy areas as well.
In the mid-1990s the public was easily swayed against comprehensive health care reform because those who felt they could afford coverage worried that a large new federal bureaucracy would make things worse for them. In demonstrating a strong link between public opinion and policy outcomes, this engagingly written book represents a substantial contribution to the study of public opinion and voting behavior, policy, and American politics generally.
Marc J. Hetherington is Associate Professor of Political Science at Vanderbilt University. He has published numerous articles in the "American Political Science Review", the "American Journal of Political Science", and the "Journal of Politics", mostly on public opinion and political behavior. He is also coauthor of "Parties, Politics, and Public Policy in America, 9th edition", with William J. Keefe.
Why Trust Matters
€43.99
