The Divided Tea Party

Matt Bai’s piece on Sunday nicely illustrated how divided Tea Party activists are about the Republican presidential contenders.  Are the findings from his interviews with activists mirrored in polling data?  Yes.  And this tells us something about whether and how the Tea Party will matter in 2012.

In a January 7-10 YouGov poll, respondents were asked two questions about the Tea Party:

Do you think of yourself as a part of the Tea Party movement?

Generally speaking, do you support or oppose the goals of the Tea Party movement?

The first question spotlights “Tea Party identifiers,” while the second spotlights “Tea Party supporters.  The former are much less numerous than the latter: only 13% of the sample are identifiers, while 31% somewhat or strongly support the movement.

Among respondents intending to vote in a GOP primary or caucus, Tea Party identifiers tend to to support one of the “conservative” candidates.  (I use the quotes because some—e.g., Ezra Klein—have argued that Romney’s platform is itself fairly conservative.)   About 22% support Gingrich and 29% support Santorum.  Only 13% support Romney.  Among those who don’t identify with the Tea Party, Romney receives a plurality of the vote (28%).  Here’s a graph:

This illustrates what Bai found: although many Tea Party identifiers do not support Romney as their first choice, they do not agree on the alternative.

Among Tea Party supporters, views of the candidates depend on how strongly one supports the Tea Party. About 77% of “strong” supporters are also Tea Party identifiers, and their opinions about the candidates mirror those of identifiers: they are split, with a tendency to support one—but not the same one!—of the conservative candidates. So 28% support Santorum, 16% support Gingrich, and 10% support Perry. About 20% support Romney.

But Romney wins the plurality (29%) of those who “somewhat support” the Tea Party, most of whom do not identify as Tea Party members. And he wins the plurality (27%) of those who neither support nor oppose the Tea Party. (Very few likely Republican voters, 9%, oppose the Tea Party.) This distinction between strong supporters and others is important. I wonder if failing to make this distinction explains why a NY Times/CBS News poll found that Tea Party supporters and non-supporters differ somewhat less in their preferences among the candidates.

So how are Tea Party sentiments shaping the views of the Republican primary candidates? It’s clear that those most involved in the movement—identifiers or strong supporters in this survey; actual activists in Bai’s interviews—want someone other than Romney. But they can’t agree on whom. Meanwhile, those who support the movement less strongly or are ambivalent lean toward Romney, although not in overwhelming numbers.

In 2010, the Tea Party appeared to help Republican candidates, as best as we can tell with the available data. But it’s a much more open question whether the Tea Party’s energy and enthusiasm can be mustered for 2012, especially if Romney is the nominee. Complicating the picture—and this is nicely illustrated in Bai’s article—is the lack of organizational coherence within the Tea Party itself. In May 2010, I wrote:

…we’ve got a movement with fissures among the activists on important issues and no real overarching organization or leadership…I will be more convinced about the longevity of the Tea Party when I am confident that its leaders will be able to coordinate their efforts and do the grassroots mobilization that will be less visible on cable news but more potent.

I think that point holds up reasonably well in 2012.

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About John Sides 27 Articles

Affiliation: George Washington University

John Sides is an Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science at George Washington University.

Professor Sides studies political behavior in American and comparative politics. His current research focuses on political campaigns, the effects of factual information on public opinion, citizenship laws and national identity, and measurement equivalence. His work has appeared in the American Political Science Review, American Journal of Political Science, American Politics Research, British Journal of Political Science, Journal of Politics, Political Communication, Political Studies, Presidential Studies Quarterly, and Legislative Studies Quarterly. He helped found and contributes to The Monkey Cage, a political science blog.

Professor Sides received his Ph.D. from University of California, Berkeley, 2003.

Visit: John Sides Page

1 Comment on The Divided Tea Party

  1. The overall remarks of the biased media ABC, CBS, CNN,especially NBC, MSNBC would have us believe that the Tea Party will not be showing up election day.They have convinced the populace that the “biased” “racist” “terrorist” and violence oriented groups (The Tea Party) are finished because they say so.This is very similar to the assaults against Sarah Palin.However with all their polls and articles which they flood the airways with, they cannot change the beliefs of this group of people.He is who he is (Obama) a socialist. This rubs a great part of the people the wrong way.Put all else aside, they will come out to defeat him.Then the media will go into it’s Bush Mode as in years past and the cycle will start over again

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