Article(electronic)2012

The Politics of Parenthood: Parenthood Effects on Issue Attitudes and Candidate Evaluations in 2008

In: American politics research, Volume 40, Issue 3, p. 419-449

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Abstract

This project employs 2008 National Election Study (NES) data to explore whether parents are different than nonparents in terms of their political attitudes and candidate evaluations. We find that parenthood does have political consequences although often not in ways suggested by conventional wisdom. Rather than finding parents to be a conservative group, our results support the idea that raising children has liberalizing effects on the attitudes of women. Fatherhood shapes attitudes less than motherhood, but these fewer effects are in a conservative direction. We argue that the distinctive politics of mothers and fathers reflects the impact of parenting as a gendered socialization experience combined with the contrasting parenthood themes articulated by the Republican and Democratic parties. Finally, despite media coverage suggesting Sarah Palin's "Hockey Mom" image would attract parents, especially mothers, to her candidacy and the Republican ticket we find no support for this idea. [Reprinted by permission of Sage Publications Inc., copyright holder.]

Languages

English

Publisher

Sage Publications, Thousand Oaks CA

ISSN: 1552-3373

DOI

10.1177/1532673X11400015

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