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Court Critics On Both Left And Right:
Supreme Court's Image Declines As Nomination Battles Loom

The Pew Research Center 15jun2005

 

Supreme Court Losing Favor

              Favorable opinion
              of Supreme Court
                Jan  June
               2001  2005 Chang
                %     %
Total           68    57   -11
Republican      80    64   -16
Democrat        61    51   -10
Independent     69    62   -7
Conserv. Repub. 78    59   -19
Mod./Lib. Repub.84    72   -12
Conserv./Mod. Dem. 66 52   -14
Liberal Democrat54    51   -3
White Protestant71    57   -14
 --Evangelical  73    51   -22
 --Mainline     69    63   -6
White Catholic  74    64   -10
Secular         58    52   -6

Public Opposed to Overturning ‘Roe’

             Completely overturn
                Roe v. Wade?
               Yes No    DK
                %   %    %
Total           30  63  7=100
Men             31  62  7=100
Women           29  64  7=100
White           31  63  6=100
Black           28  60  12=100
Hispanic        31  62  7=100
18-29           29  66  5=100
30-49           28  65  7=100
50-64           32  62  6=100
65+             34  57  9=100
College graduate20  75  5=100
Some college    32  63  5=100
H.S. or less    35  57  8=100
Republican      48  47  5=100
Democrat        19  75  6=100
Independent     25  69  6=100
Conserv Repub   62  33  5=100
Mod./Lib Repub  25  71  4=100
Cons./Mod Dem   23  72  5=100
Liberal Democrat13  82  5=100
White Protestant37  56  7=100
--Evangelical   52  41  7=100
--Mainline      21  71  8=100
White Catholic  31  65  4=100
Secular         12  82  6=100
Attend church
Weekly or more  46  48  6=100
Sometimes       22  70  8=100
Seldom or never 17  77  6=100

Republicans Divided by Roe

Republicans who want to...
			  Overturn  Maintain
View of the	  	  Roe	    Roe
Supreme Court		  %	    %
Favorable		  57	    71
Unfavorable		  33	    16
Don’t know		  10	    13
			 100	   100
Appoint justice who
will make Court...		
More conservative	  76	   33
More liberal		 *	   18
Same as now		  21	   43
Don’t know		   3	    6
			 100	  100
Next appointment is...	
Very important		  62	   43
Somewhat important	  27	   29
Not too/at all important  10	   28	
Don’t know		   1	   *
			 100	  100
Number of cases		(222)	 (222)

Where the Parties Stand

                   Average rating of...
Rating             Your-    Rep   Dem
given by...         self   Party  Party
All Americans       3.4     2.6    4.2

Republicans         2.7     2.6    4.7
Democrats           4.0     2.4    4.0
Independents        3.6     2.8    4.0

Average ratings based on those who were able to
place each item on a scale from 1 to 6 where “1"
represents very conservative and “6" represents
very liberal.

Half of Independents See GOP Leaning Right

Placement of...*              Total    Rep Dem Ind
The Republican Party           %        %    %     %
More conservative than self    47       28   64    51
Same as self                   21       43    8    17
More liberal than self         20       24   17    19
Don’t know                     12        5   11    13
                               100      100  100   100
The Democratic Party
More liberal than self         42       69   28    36
Same as self                   24       10   34    28
More conservative than self    22       13   29    24
Don’t know                     12        8   9     12
                               100      100  100   100

Percentages show how many place each party higher, 
lower, or at the same position as themselves on a
scale from 1 to 6 where “1" represents very conservative
and “6" represents very liberal.

Rating the Parties on Issues

                         Rep Dem
On social issues such as Party Party
homosexuality and abortion%    %
Too conservative          38   13
Too liberal               13   35
About right               34   36
Don’t know                15   16
                          100  100
On economic issues such as
taxes and gov’t programs
Too conservative          36   14
Too liberal               17   33
About right               33   39
Don’t know                14   14
                          100  100
On foreign policy and
national security issues
Too tough                 22    5
Not tough enough          31   46
About right               35   35
Don’t know                12   14
                          100  100

Independents View the Parties

                         Rep Dem
                         Party Party
On social issues...       %    %
Too conservative          41   14
Too liberal               14   27
About right               30   41
Don’t know                15   18
                          100  100
On economic issues...
Too conservative          38   18
Too liberal               18   29
About right               29   39
Don’t know                15   14
                          100  100
Based on 450 respondents who think
of themselves as independents.

With an aging Supreme Court possibly facing major changes, the court’s public image has eroded significantly. Currently, 57% of Americans have a favorable opinion of the Supreme Court, with 30% expressing an unfavorable view. In the past, favorable views of the court typically surpassed 70%; even in January 2001, shortly after the Supreme Court’s ruling deciding the contentious presidential election, 68% expressed a positive opinion of the court.

Two very different factors are contributing to the court’s lower standing with the public. Democrats turned more negative toward the Supreme Court in the wake of its controversial decision in Bush v. Gore. Positive opinions of the court among Democrats fell from 78% in May 1997 to 61% in January 2001. Democratic support for the court has continued to ebb, and now stands at 51%.

But much of the recent decline in positive views of the court has come among conservative Republicans. Favorable opinions of the Supreme Court among both conservative Republicans and white evangelical Protestants have declined by about 20 points since January 2001. An analysis of the poll finds that Republicans who want the court to take a tougher stand against abortion rights are more dissatisfied with the court than Republicans who do not.

The latest national survey by the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press, conducted June 8-12 among 1,464 Americans, finds that the struggle over the court’s future is beginning to intensify. Overall, 47% of the public says the selection of the next Supreme Court justice is very important to them personally, up from 38% in March. But at this point, the issue is mainly of interest to the extreme wings of each political party. Fully six-in-ten conservative Republicans (61%), and the same number of liberal Democrats, attach great importance to the selection of the next nominee. That compares with just four-in-ten conservative and moderate Democrats, and about the same number of moderate and liberal Republicans (38%).

On what is likely to be a pivotal issue in a Supreme Court nomination battle – abortion rights – the public continues to strongly oppose the complete overturning of the Roe v. Wade decision. By 63%-30%, the public rejects the idea of completely overturning the 1973 decision establishing a woman’s right to abortion. That margin has remained stable for more than a decade.

In many ways, the political divide over that landmark court decision reflects the battle lines over the court’s future. Solid majorities in most demographic groups oppose completely overturning the Roe v. Wade decision, but opposition is greatest among liberal Democrats (82%) and seculars (82%).

Conservative Republicans are by far the most supportive of overturning the Roe v. Wade decision (62%). This represents a deep division within the Republican base, as Republicans who describe themselves as moderate or liberal favor maintaining Roe v. Wade by a 71% to 25% margin. The only other major group in which a majority favors completely overturning Roe v. Wade is white evangelical Protestants (52%).

Dissatisfaction with the Supreme Court among Republicans is closely tied to views about Roe v. Wade. The roughly half of Republicans who would like to see the abortion decision overturned are twice as likely as their counterparts who support the status quo to give the Court an unfavorable rating (33% vs. 16%).

Attitudes toward Roe v. Wade also are a major factor in Republican views of how President Bush should approach a possible court vacancy. Overall, a 35% plurality wants President Bush to select a nominee who will keep the court as it is now; 29% favor a nominee who will move the court in a more conservative direction; and 28% favor a nominee who will make the court more liberal.

Fully three-quarters of Republican opponents of the Roe decision (76%) want Bush to appoint a justice who will make the court more conservative, compared with just 33% of Republican supporters of Roe. A plurality of Republican supporters of the Roe precedent (43%) believe Bush should appoint a justice who keeps the court about the same as it is now.

There also is a large gap in the intensity of opinions about the court’s future between Republicans who oppose Roe and those who support it. Fully 62% of Roe opponents within the party say the decision of how to fill an upcoming vacancy on the Court is very important to them personally; just 43% of those who support Roe agree.

 

Congress, GOP Down

The new Pew survey finds further evidence of public dissatisfaction with Congress. About half of Americans (49%) express a favorable opinion of Congress, a decline from 56% a year ago and the lowest mark since the 1999 impeachment trial of former President Bill Clinton (48% in January 1999).

Views of Congress remain partisan, but the decline in congressional favorability has come among members of both parties. The shift has been greatest among those at either end of the political spectrum. Just three-in-ten liberal Democrats (31%) have a positive view of Congress, down from 53% last June. Conservative Republicans also are less happy with Congress; 58% have a favorable opinion of Congress, compared with 70% a year ago.

Positive opinions of the Republican Party have slipped since the end of last year. Currently, 48% have a favorable opinion of the GOP, with 44% unfavorable. In December 2004, positive opinions of the Republican Party outnumbered negative ones by 52%-42%. Over the same period, ratings for the Democratic Party have been stable (53% then/52% now). In the new poll, fewer than half of those ages 65 and older (46%) express a positive opinion of the Republican Party, down from 57% last December.

 

Rating the Parties Ideologically

As in the past, most Americans see themselves close to the center of the ideological spectrum. And they view the two parties as being about equally distant from their own position. However, the new poll finds more political independents see the Republican Party as too conservative than see Democratic Party as too liberal.

On an ideological scale of 1-6 (where 1 is the most conservative and 6 is the most liberal), the midpoint is 3.5 and the public’s self-rating, on average, is 3.4. The Republican Party, on average, receives a rating of 2.6; the average rating for the Democratic Party is the same distance in the liberal direction (4.2).

On average, Republicans rate the Democratic Party as more liberal than Democrats rate their own party (4.7 vs. 4.0). By contrast, Democrats place the GOP at about the same place on the spectrum as Republicans place their party (2.4 vs. 2.6). Independents view the Republican Party as slightly further away from the ideological midpoint than the Democratic Party (2.8 for Republican Party; 4.0 for Democratic Party).

This can also be seen by comparing how independents rate themselves versus how they rate the two parties. Roughly half of independents (51%) rate the Republican Party as more conservative than themselves; fewer independents (36%) rate the Democratic Party as more liberal than themselves.

Significantly, more Republicans are in tune ideologically with the GOP than Democrats are with their party. A plurality of Republicans (43%) rate their party the same as they rate themselves. By contrast, only about a third of Democrats (34%) give the Democratic Party the same rating they give themselves.

 

Ideology and Issues

The public’s view of the parties’ ideological stances on social issues, like homosexuality and abortion, is almost evenly split. About as many say the Republican Party is too conservative on these issues (38%) as believe the Democratic Party is too liberal (35%).

There is a comparable divide in opinions of the parties’ ideological positions on economic issues. However, there are bigger differences in the public’s perceptions of where the parties stand on foreign policy and national security issues. Nearly half (46%) say the Democratic Party is ‘not tough enough’ on these issues. Views of the Republican Party’s positions on national security are more divided; 31% believe the GOP is not tough enough on foreign policy, while 22% say it is too tough.

Pluralities of independents rate the GOP as being too conservative on social issues (41%) and economic issues (38%). By contrast, pluralities of independents say the Democratic Party is about right on both sets of issues.

Like the general public, independents are divided in their assessment of the Republican Party’s positions on foreign policy; a third say their positions are about right, with somewhat smaller percentages saying they are not tough enough (30%) or too tough (26%). But a plurality of independents (44%) believe the Democratic Party is not tough enough on foreign policy.

 

 

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