Is the Country Ready for a Gay President? Don't Trust the Polls
As Pete Buttigieg, the openly gay mayor of South Bend, Ind., has surged to a top position in Iowa polls in the Democratic presidential primary, media reports have emerged warning that his sexuality may yet derail his White House bid. A recent national Politico/Morning Consult poll found that a plurality of voters, 45 percent, think the country is not ready for an openly gay president, with only 40 percent saying its ready. Consultants have chimed in to say the mayor may be less electable than coastal elites realize because hes gay.
Ordinary voters are quoted saying they or their devout Christian mother would never vote for a gay. And the Buttigieg campaigns own focus groups recently found that many undecided black voters in South Carolina regard the candidates sexual orientation as a barrier to winning their votes.
But the power of polls to predict behavior around social issues and disfavored groups has always been poor, and what we know about peoples attitudes and actions when it comes to L.G.B.T. concerns tells a cautionary tale about how to interpret claims by voters that they wont support an openly gay candidate for president.
Pollsters have long known about the poor predictive power of asking respondents how they would treat members of an unfavored minority group, especially in politically polarized climates. In the 1930s, following a period, like today, of growing anti-immigrant sentiment, the Stanford researcher Richard LaPiere crisscrossed the country with a Chinese couple, visiting hundreds of hotels and restaurants. Nearly all of them welcomed the group as patrons.
But when he contacted the establishments months later asking them if they would serve Chinese people, over 90 percent said they would not. In an ensuing article, Attitudes vs. Actions, LaPiere concluded that polls about social attitudes often reflect how respondents feel rather than how theyll actually behave.
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I wonder given that some self-professed liberals can't even bring themselves to admit that gays are minorities.