PRINCETON, NJ -- A Gallup Poll finds a statistically significant increase
since last year in the percentage of Americans who describe the Democratic
Party's views as being "too liberal," from 39% to 46%. This is the largest
percentage saying so since November 1994, after the party's losses in that
year's midterm elections.
Most major demographic and attitudinal subgroups show at least a slight
uptick since 2008 in perceptions that the Democratic Party is too liberal. The
increasing perception of the Democrats as too far left comes as President
Obama and the Democrats in Congress have expanded the government's role in the
economy to address the economic problems facing the country. Additionally, the
government is working toward major healthcare reform legislation and
strengthening environmental regulations.
Notably, there has been no change over the past year in the percentage of
Americans who say the Republican Party is "too conservative," though the 43%
who say the party leans too far to the right matches the historical high mark
set last year.
As a result, now slightly more Americans perceive the Democratic Party as
being too liberal (46%) than view the GOP as being too conservative (43%).
But the Democratic Party still compares favorably to the Republican Party from
the standpoint that more Americans say the Democrats' ideology is "about
right" (42%) than say this about the Republicans' ideology (34%).
In fact, the 34% who say the GOP is about right is a new low since the
question was first asked in 1992, and a far cry from November 1994 and
November 2002, when majorities thought the Republicans' views were
appropriately balanced.
Independents' Views of the Parties
Political independents' perceptions of the two major parties' ideological
orientation are important since both parties need to appeal to the political
center in order to win elections. (The vast majority of partisan identifiers
predictably view their chosen party's views as being about right and the other
party's as being too extreme.)
Currently, independents are more likely to view both parties as being too
extreme in either direction than to believe they are about right. But more
independents say the Democratic Party (38%) than the Republican Party (25%) is
about right.
Independents are a little more likely to say the Republican Party is too
conservative than to say the Democratic Party is too liberal, in a slight
departure from the results among all Americans.
Since last year, there have been declining perceptions among independents
that each party is about right in its ideological orientation -- from 31% to
25% for the Republican Party and from 43% to 38% for the Democratic Party.
Most of the decline in regard to the Democratic Party has been associated with
in an increase in seeing the party as "too liberal."
Implications
The Democratic Party continues to hold the upper hand over the Republican
Party in the current U.S. political environment by a variety of measures,
including
party identification and
party favorable ratings. However, compared to last year, Americans are
significantly more likely to see the Democratic Party as too liberal, and as a
result, they are somewhat more likely to view the party as being too far left
than to perceive the Republican Party as too far right. That may expose a bit
of a vulnerability for the Democratic Party, and if perceptions of the
Democratic Party as being too liberal continue to grow, the GOP may be able to
win back some of the support it has lost in recent years. But that may be
possible only if the Republicans are at the same time able to convince the
public that they are not too far to the political right.
Survey Methods
Results are based on telephone interviews with 1,011 national adults, aged 18
and older, conducted June 14-17, 2009. For results based on the total sample
of national adults, one can say with 95% confidence that the maximum margin of
sampling error is ±3 percentage points.
Interviews are conducted with respondents on land-line telephones (for
respondents with a land-line telephone) and cellular phones (for respondents
who are cell-phone only).
In addition to sampling error, question wording and practical difficulties in
conducting surveys can introduce error or bias into the findings of public
opinion polls.