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Tea Party: Polls Show Importance To GOP Base

Tea Party Debt Ceiling

First Posted: 07/15/11 01:54 PM ET Updated: 09/14/11 06:12 AM ET

WASHINGTON -- As negotiations continue over raising the debt limit, Republican leaders are at odds with their own base, amid reports that their electoral coalition is breaking down. Public polling data illustrating the growing importance of the Tea Party vividly depicts the intra-party split and demonstrates the pressure Republican leaders now face.

Many national media polls now track the number of Americans who consider themselves Tea Party "supporters." As shown below, most now find between 25 and 30 percent of respondents fall into that category, with no consistent trend over the last year.

2011-07-15-Blumenthal-TeaPartysupportergraph.png

Republican pollster Bill McInturff has taken this measurement a step further in the polls he conducts with Democrat Peter Hart for NBC News and The Wall Street Journal. Since October of last year, their surveys have asked those who identify or lean Republican and consider themselves supporters of the Tea Party to choose the term that describes them better, between "supporter of the Tea Party Movement" and "Republican."

According to a presentation McInturff posted on his company website, in the NBC/Wall Street Journal surveys conducted in October 2010, this question split Republican voters into roughly thirds.

  • 10 percent (of all voters) think of themselves as Tea Party supporters first, Republicans second
  • 10 percent who think of themselves as Republicans first, Tea Party supporters second
  • 12 percent who are Republicans but do not think of themselves as Tea Party supporters

Although random sampling error causes these numbers to fluctuate slightly from month to month, the breakout of the two groups of Tea Party Republicans has remained roughly consistent in NBC/WSJ polls conducted during 2011:

2011-07-15-Blumenthal-WSJNBCTeaPartyGOP.png

What makes this Republican segmentation interesting is the way it correlates with political ideology and attitudes about President Obama. In his presentation, McInturff also included the following results, showing huge gaps in the responses to three questions asked on multiple surveys during October 2010.

2011-07-15-Blumenthal-GOPTeaPartyMcInturff.png

The Republicans who primarily identified themselves as members of the Tea Party were nearly monolithic: 83 percent identified as conservatives, 92 percent rejected government as a way to solve problems and meet needs and 78 percent blamed President Obama for the condition of the economy. The non-Tea Party Republicans were far less conservative (48 percent), with nearly a third open to government solutions (31 percent) and willing to give Obama benefit of the doubt on the economy (30 percent). The Republican-first Tea Party supporters fell somewhere in the middle.

At a Christian Science Monitor breakfast with reporters this past November, McInturff explained that while the Tea-Party-First group amounts to just a third of all Republicans, "they make up 40 plus percent of the primary vote or maybe higher, maybe 40 or 45 percent." Judging by their "issue positions and intensity," he added, "they are in a no-compromise stance. They don't want engagement with the president, they don't want to work across party lines."

Has any of that changed since last fall? McInturff was reluctant to share new tabulations for all three groups, since the number of interviews in each group in any one survey tends to be small and thus produce unstable results. However, he confirmed that both groups of Tea Party Republicans (those who think of themselves as Republicans first and those who think of themselves as Tea Party members first) tend to be more likely to vote in a primary, and they remain as heavily conservative, as opposed to government solving problems and as willing to blame President Obama for a failing economy as they were in October of last year.

While this approach to segmenting the Republican electorate is unique to the NBC/Wall Street Journal poll, their analysis can be confirmed and extended using similar questions about the Tea Party asked in a half-dozen surveys conducted by YouGov/Polimetrix since February and shared with The Huffington Post. (YouGov surveys are conducted online using an "opt-in" panel of respondents recruited to complete surveys, a methodology that is the subject of an ongoing debate in the survey world. In this case, however, the results are largely consistent with those from the NBC/Wall Street Journal poll.)

The YouGov surveys first ask respondents if they think of themselves "as a part of the Tea Party movement," and then ask if, "generally speaking," they "support or oppose the goals of the Tea Party movement." When combined with the standard party identification question, these measures allow for a similar segmentation that, like the NBC/Wall Street Journal groupings, splits Republican roughly into thirds:

  • 12 percent of adults are Republicans who think of themselves as part of the Tea Party movement
  • 10 percent are Republicans who support the Tea Party's goals but don't think of themselves as part of the movement
  • 8 percent are Republicans who neither support nor consider themselves part of the Tea Party movement.

These three groups also show similar attitudes: In the YouGov surveys, Republicans who think of themselves as part of the Tea Party movement are nearly unanimous in their disapproval of President Obama (97 percent) and their desire for the federal government to cut taxes (97 percent). Two-thirds (67 percent) also say they dislike Obama as a person. The Republicans with less affinity for the Tea Party also tend to disapprove of Obama and tend to favor tax cuts, but with significantly more dissent and far less intensity.

2011-07-15-Blumenthal-GOPTeaPartyYouGov.png

The YouGov results also indicate that the strongest Tea Party supporters are paying much closer attention to the 2012 campaign than other Republicans. Virtually all of the Republicans who think of themselves as part of the Tea Party (91 percent) say they are following the 2012 campaign closely, and roughly two-thirds (65 percent) say they are following it very closely. In contrast, less than half of the Republicans who do not support the Tea Party (45 percent) say they are following the campaign, and only 10 percent are following it very closely.

Taken together, these findings have important consequences for both the ongoing debate over raising the debt ceiling and the upcoming 2012 campaign.

First, the Tea Party wing of the Republican primary is the most attentive and thus most likely to turn out in next year's caucuses and primaries. These data imply that Tea Party-first Republicans will have a disproportionate impact in 2012.

Second, as McInturff observed in November, the strongest Tea Party-first Republicans are in no mood for compromise. They are the no retreat, no surrender wing of the Republican party. Their willingness to identify more with the Tea Party than with Republicans as a whole speaks to their desire to take stronger stands than they perceive the Republican party establishment as willing to take.

Third, and perhaps most important, the Tea Party-first Republicans are not some minor faction within the Republican party. They are the heart and soul of its base, the most active and committed Republican voters.

Last November, Bill McInturff referred to the Tea Party-first Republicans as his party's "special forces elite troops." The middle group, he said, "are sort of like the regular army, and the Republicans that aren't the tea party are kind of the support staff far from the front lines."

The Republican leadership in Washington is currently stuck between the rock of their activist base and the hard place of their allies and benefactors in the business community who fear the consequences of a government default. These polling data tell us that their dilemma will not easily resolve.

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WASHINGTON -- As negotiations continue over raising the debt limit, Republican leaders are at odds with their own base, amid reports that their electoral coalition is breaking down. Public polling dat...
WASHINGTON -- As negotiations continue over raising the debt limit, Republican leaders are at odds with their own base, amid reports that their electoral coalition is breaking down. Public polling dat...
 
 
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12:47 PM on 07/29/2011
FUNNY HOW IN THE WHOLE HISTORY OF OUR COUNTRY A PRESIDENT HAS NEVER HAD THIS MUCH PROBLEM ....EVER.... IN GETTING THE CEILING RAISED....BUT BECAUSE THE TEA PARTY AND THE REPUBLICAN PARTY DON'T LIKE PRESIDENT OBAMA... WELL, THEY JUST CAN'T AGREE..... GIVE ME A BREAK
12:44 PM on 07/29/2011
All this Tea Party cares about is how bad can we make PRESIDENT OBAMA look... why dont you try and do something different for a change and work for the AMERICAN PEOPLE and not your WALLETS...you are trying your best to set PRESIDENT Obama up to fail... GIVE IT A REST!! IF YOU HAD TO LIVE ON WHAT I DO AND NOT ON WHAT ALL THOSE LOBBIST LINE YOUR POCKETS WITH YOU WOULD BE SINGING A DIFFERENT TONE!
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01:27 AM on 07/27/2011
Yeah, shut down the government! Hope every white-haired Tea Party screamy in that photo has to eat cat food for a month or two while listening to FOX blather about American exceptionalism. Chow, chow, chow, Nana!
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joeyfoto
“Écraser l'infamie!”
10:06 AM on 07/21/2011
Tea Party is a poison pill that will end the GOP bid to control America.

It is obvious to even the most obtuse that these toxic patriots can not be trusted with the responsibility of governance.

The Tea Party is essential to victory for the GOP.
That's bad news for the Republican Party.
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Bobbie Smithfield
the world would be better if i were in charge
01:19 PM on 07/20/2011
i am so glad that my district is represented by a democrat. they are willing to work with and be a part of govt. the tea party only knows how to cry and scream like a petulant child.
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joeyfoto
“Écraser l'infamie!”
07:50 PM on 07/19/2011
The strongest correlation I could see at a glance was that government should cut taxes and spending on programs that benefit other people then that government should default on its bond obligations.

That comes after the government should supply everyone with all the cake and ice-cream they can eat until they throw up. This is not a Tea Party; this is a four year old's birthday party.
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joeyfoto
“Écraser l'infamie!”
06:55 PM on 07/19/2011
This "Tea-Party" is a group of people who should never again have the keys to the country.

These are people who do not have a grasp of the immediate consequences of their hysterical reaction to a admittedly real problem. If you wanted to turn America into Greece, default on our legitimate obligations and let the interest rates shoot through the roof. Even talking about it threatens our bond rating... Don't these people know what this will do to adjustable mortgage rates? Don't they know this childish fit of ignorance will turn recession to depression?

This is the work of fools in control of a cowardly and degenerate political party.
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jabailo
(Participant) Texeme.Construct()
10:22 PM on 07/18/2011
The real "Rotton Party" is the Democrat...which now has zero popular support and is based mainly on Government employees and coastal establishment organizations.

The "GOP" is almost in the same boat, basically being a meme-carrier for the TP meme. The frission between the grass roots support and party leadership is all to apparent and will not last long.
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joeyfoto
“Écraser l'infamie!”
07:00 PM on 07/19/2011
jaballo wrote: "The real "Rotton Party" is the Democrat..­.which now has zero popular support and is based mainly on Government employees and coastal establishment organizations organizations"

You should get out more... What you wrote about the Democratic Party is ridiculously wrong.

As to the Republicans, you're right about the friction but wrong about the outcome... The big money interestes own the GOP, the TP is just like the fetus nuts and gay bashers... just easy votes to elect the corporate agenda...
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09:11 PM on 07/18/2011
Shut her down!
Stop paying our bills!
What could go wrong?

I wonder what would happen to me if I stopped paying my bills, the way the Republicans seem to want to do. Nothing good, I imagine.
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billydkidd
" Tea for the Tiller Man "
08:47 AM on 07/27/2011
You would be in the same place you are going to be if they get their way......in the woods eating squirls, berries and nuts.
02:10 PM on 07/18/2011
Get Progressiv­e, Be Progressiv­e taking the Fight for American Citizens Rights to the Corporate Republican­'s Nationwide­. United States we are, We The United People will always be. Go Now to:
www.Progre­ssivesUnit­ed.org Join the Fight for Our FREEDOM
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ggs83
11:55 PM on 07/17/2011
It would be interesting to see a profile of those who identify themselves as part of the tea party first.
What's their age, their race, their ethnicity, their religion, the amount of time they spend listening to conservative talk radio, the cable news stations they watch and what is their favorite word after NO. There are probably other criteria that would be valuable too. But such a profile might explain a lot.
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09:13 PM on 07/18/2011
When I look at the current crop of Tea Baggers, I am reminded much more of Lewis Carroll's Tea Party, and of the Mad Hatter, than of the Bostonians' Tea Party.
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ggs83
11:32 PM on 07/18/2011
Good description--and these Mad Hatters are pulling us down that rabbit hole with them; we keep struggling for reality and they keep pulling us down
would much rather be swimming in the bay
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NWBrunette
Blessed Girl
11:36 PM on 07/17/2011
"Keep your gubmint hands off my Medicare!" - nothing captures the bagger spirit better than that!
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dtallwalk
11:00 PM on 07/17/2011
NO RETREAT, NO SURRENDER yeaaa right
Too bad you did not think that way when the republicans spent all of that money
On 2 wars. Too bad your foresight then was not as good as your hindsight now
We’d be a darn site better off Tomorrow.
10:40 PM on 07/17/2011
While Rep. Michele Bachmann has forcefully denounced the Medicaid program for swelling the "welfare rolls," the mental health clinic run by her husband has been collecting annual Medicaid payments totaling over $137,000 for the treatment of patients since 2005, according to new figures obtained by NBC News.

Questions about the Bachmann family's receipt of government funds arose this week after a Los Angeles Times story reported that a family farm in which Michelle Bachmann is a partner had received nearly $260,000 in federal farm subsidies. http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/270770/muddled-medicaid-jonah-goldberg
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blinkthink
Bob Dole-Truthteller of the GOTP
07:54 AM on 07/18/2011
Hypocrisy is the Bachmann creed. Bachmann also charged taxpayers $14K for her tea party in this economy. She loves to grab all the gubmint money coming her way, but would deny healthcare to others.
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09:14 PM on 07/18/2011
Medicaid causes welfare? I guess I shouldn't be surprised. Every day brings another insane attribute to the Queen of the Crazies.
zatonoichi
the blind swordsman
10:21 PM on 07/17/2011
It can't be possible that all Teabaggers are corporate oligarchs who earn at least a quarter mil a year. A great many of them must be middle-class, working republicans. If so, they are voting (unknowingly) against their own interests, in supporting republican politicians.

Which makes me think that the Teabag movement is really just a support group for persons with cognitive and intellectual disabilities--sort of a political Special Olympics.

This impression is further fortified every time I see a grown-up adult teabagger, all dressed up for halloween in a cute little tricorn hat and pantaloons.

Middle-class teabaggers are like chickens, voting for foxes. Or sheep, voting for wolves.
01:25 PM on 07/18/2011
indeed!!!!!

The wealthy has always paid half the middle class
to supress the rest of the classes and the 'tea bag'
movement is the result of this principle!