As evidence of the link between health care and racial attitudes, we analyzed survey data gathered in late 2008. The survey asked people whether they favored a government run health insurance plan, a system like we have now, or something in between. It also asked four questions about how people feel about blacks.
Taken together the four items form a measure of what scholars call racial resentment. We find an extraordinarily strong correlation between racial resentment of blacks and opposition to health care reform.
Among whites with above average racial resentment, only 19 percent favored fundamental health care reforms and 57 percent favored the present system. Among those who have below average racial resentment, more than twice as many (45 percent) favored government run health care and less than half as many (25 percent) favored the status quo.
No such relationship between racial attitudes and opinions on health care existed in the mid-1990s during the Clinton effort.
Friday, September 25, 2009
I GUESS I WAS NAIVE
I did think that Pres. Obama's election would fire up the racist Aryan Nation/Strom Front crowd but I thought they played a minor role in the opposition to health care reform. Until yesterday, when I read Matt Yglesias' post about this article in the WaPo about how attitudes toward race influence attitudes about health care reform. Here's the sad conclusion:
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