FILE nes2004panel_int.txt ------------------------- American National Election Studies: 2004 Panel Study (2004.S) Codebook introduction file VERSION 20050502 (May 2, 2005) AMERICAN NATIONAL ELECTION STUDIES: 2004 PANEL STUDY CODEBOOK Center for Political Studies Institute for Social Research The University of Michigan CITATION The National Election Studies (www.umich.edu/~nes). THE 2004 NES PANEL STUDY [dataset]. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan, Center for Political Studies [producer and distributor]. These materials are based on work supported by the Carnegie Corporation of New York (under grant "D B 7532.R01"), and the University of Michigan. Any opinions, findings and conclusions or recommendations expressed in these materials are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the funding organizations. TABLE OF CONTENTS Note: >> sections in the codebook introduction and codebook appendix can be navigated in the machine-readable files by searching ">>". INTRODUCTORY MATERIALS (this file) ---------------------- >> 2004 PANEL STUDY: GENERAL INTRODUCTION >> 2004 PANEL STUDY: STUDY DESCRIPTION >> 2004 PANEL STUDY: STUDY CONTENT AND ADMINISTRATION >> 2004 PANEL STUDY: SAMPLING AND WEIGHT INFORMATION >> 2004 PANEL STUDY: NOTE ON CONFIDENTIAL VARIABLES >> 2004 PANEL STUDY: FILE STRUCTURE AND INFORMATION >> 2004 PANEL STUDY: PROCESSING INFORMATION >> 2004 PANEL STUDY: CODEBOOK INFORMATION >> 2004 PANEL STUDY: VARIABLE DESCRIPTION LIST VARIABLE DOCUMENTATION (file nes2004panel_var.txt) ---------------------- P040001 Study IDs P040101 Study weights P041001 Study-level administration P041201 Sampling/geocodes P044001 Post field and administration P044101 Post interviewer description P044201 Post error flags P044401 Post randomization P044501 Post candidate P045001 Post survey P045201 Post survey interviewer observation APPENDICES (file nes2004panel_app.txt) ---------- >> 2004 PANEL STUDY: 2000 SAMPLING INFORMATION >> 2004 PANEL STUDY: GENERAL INTRODUCTION The 2004 Panel Study was conducted between November 3 and December 20 of the year 2004. The study consisted of a post-election survey of 840 respondents who had previously provided an interview in both the 2000 NES study and the 2002 NES study. Accompanying the dataset is a codebook containing detailed variable descriptions, as well as data descriptor statement files that can be used to read the raw data file into common data analysis software packages such as SAS, SPSS, and STATA. >> 2004 PANEL STUDY: STUDY DESCRIPTION The 2004 Panel Study was conducted by the Center for Political Studies at the Institute for Social Research, under the general direction of the Principal Investigators, Nancy Burns and Donald R. Kinder. Data collection services were provided by Schulman, Ronca & Bucuvalas (SRBI), using interviewers stationed in New York City. This is the latest in a series of studies of American national elections produced by the Center for Political Studies at the University of Michigan. The study would not have been possible without the financial support of the Carnegie Corporation of New York (under grant "D B 7532.R01") and the University of Michigan. The 2004 Panel Study was designed through consultation between the Principal Investigators and a national Board of Overseers. Board members during the 2004 Panel Study included John H. Aldrich (Duke University), Stephen Ansolabehere (Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Nancy Burns, ex officio (University of Michigan), Russell Dalton (University of California - Irvine), John Mark Hansen, chair (University of Chicago), Simon Jackman (Stanford University), Donald Kinder, ex officio (University of Michigan), Jon A. Krosnick (Ohio State University), Arthur Lupia (University of Michigan), Diana C. Mutz (University of Pennsylvania), and Wendy Rahn (University of Minnesota). Additional information concerning the 2004 Panel Study, including notification of select errors discovered and made known to NES Staff after the data release date, can be found on the NES Website (http://www.umich.edu/~nes). Any questions not answered on the website or by this codebook can be directed to the NES Staff by e-mail to "nes@umich.edu" or by regular postal service to the address below. National Election Studies (NES) Staff Center for Political Studies Institute for Social Research, 4100 Bay University of Michigan 426 Thompson Street Ann Arbor, MI 48104-2321 E-Mail: nes@umich.edu Website: http://www.umich.edu/~nes >> 2004 PANEL STUDY: STUDY CONTENT AND ADMINISTRATION This study completes the 2000-2002-2004 Panel Study, in which we re-interviewed a sample of voting age Americans in the fall of 2004, immediately after the presidential election. These respondents were first questioned by the National Election Study in the fall of 2000 and then again in the fall of 2002. Interviewing this sample one last time, at the climax of the 2004 presidential campaign, makes possible a uniquely valuable analysis of the political consequences of historic events. We know a great deal about this sample – what they thought about politics and society and the place of the United States in the world – before history intruded so forcefully on their lives: before the unprecedented election contest of 2000 and before the terrorist attack of September 11th. We know, from the 2002 interviews, what sense they began to make of these events. Having interviewed the same people again in 2004 enables us to complete the story, to trace out the political implications of the turbulent history of the last four years. Such implications include Americans' willingness to participate in politics, their satisfaction with democratic institutions, their support for an ongoing war on terrorism, and in light of the changed landscape of international politics, the priority they assign to such domestic matters as growth, deficits, and inequality. The 2004 phase of the panel study was given in large part to questions that capture the likely consequences of the election contest of 2000 and the terrorist attack of September 11th, as understood and interpreted by ordinary Americans. This included instrumentation on participation in political and civic life, satisfaction with democratic institutions, support for administration policy, views on Afghanistan, Iraq, and homeland security. The survey, which was post-election only, began on November 3, 2004 and ended December 20, 2004. Data collection was conducted by Schulman, Ronca & Bucuvalas (SRBI), using interviewers stationed in New York City. All interviewing was conducted by telephone using Computer-Assisted Telephone Interviewing (CATI) technology. The CATI instrument was programmed using SPSS Quancept. All interviews were conducted in English, as there were no translations of the questionnaire to a language other than English. The sample was all released at the beginning of the field period. Interview length averaged 45 minutes. Randomization was used extensively throughout the questionnaire, for purposes of randomizing order within batteries or question series, application of half-sampling to some questions, and random ordering of question blocks. The sample for the 2004 Panel Study consisted of the 1,187 panel respondents that provided a pre-election interview in the 2002 NES. Please note that the 324 fresh cross-section respondents that participated in the 2002 NES were not part of the sample for this study. Users are advised to become familiar with the weight variable provided in the dataset, and apply it as appropriate to their analyses. Eligibility: All panel cases were considered eligible based on their participation in the 2002 NES study, unless they were found to be deceased at the time of the 2004 Panel Study (16 persons became deceased in the interim). Interviews: Interviews were either considered a completion, or not a completion - partial interviews were not accepted. 2004 Panel Study: Response Rates Interviews Eligible Reinterview Rate ---------------------------------------- 840 1171 71.8% The reinterview rate was calculated as the number of completed interviews (840) over the number of eligible respondents (1171). The number of eligible respondents was calculated as the number of panel respondents who provided a 2002 NES pre-election interview (1187) minus the number of respondents deceased since the 2002 NES study (16). The original 2000 NES study sample consisted of 2,984 eligible respondents. Of those persons 1,807 (60.6%) provided a pre-election interview in 2000. Of those 1,807 persons, 1,187 (65.7%) provided a pre-election interview in 2002. Of those 1,187 persons, 840 (70.9%) provided an interview in 2004. Thus, the 840 persons that provided an interview in 2002 comprise 28.2% (28.2% = 840/2984 = 60.6% * 65.7% * 70.9%) of the original set of eligible sample members in 2000. The field and study staff implemented a number of strategies throughout the study to bolster response rates. Respondents received advance mailings by two-day USPS priority mail with a letter, brochure, two dollar bill, and a token gift (notepad) enclosed. Also included was a contact card (with the panel member's name, address and phone number, and a message to have them call our toll free line or mail back the card if the information was not correct), and a postage-paid envelope to return the card in. Each respondent was offered $20, $40, or $50 as an incentive for their interview - the amount offered was whatever maximum amount was offered to them during the 2000 and 2002 studies. Cases that showed resistance to interview were usually mailed a letter tailored to their reason for resistance, and offering $50 for their interview. Cases that showed reluctance to interview were to be called back by an interviewer with refusal conversion experience. On November 30th we began offering all respondents $50 for their interview when we called. On December 2nd a letter was mailed to all cases that had not yet yielded a completion; the letter mentioned the incentive of $50 per interview. >> 2004 PANEL STUDY: SAMPLING AND WEIGHT INFORMATION The initial sample drawn in 2000 for the 2000 NES serves as the total sample for the 2000-2002-2004 panel, and is documented in "2004 PANEL STUDY: 2000 SAMPLE DESIGN" in the codebook appendix file. Panel weight P040101 is constructed for longitudinal analysis; marginals are unweighted. >> 2004 PANEL STUDY: NOTE ON CONFIDENTIAL VARIABLES Permission to use, for approved scholarly research, the more detailed geographic-information variables documented in this codebook (but not available in the public-release datafile) may be obtained through special permission from the NES Board of Overseers. In addition, text responses to open-ended questions are kept strictly confidential except through special permission obtained from the NES Board of Overseers for researchers who wish to develop coding schemes pursuant to an approved scholarly research. More information about special permission is available from the NES website or from NES staff. >> 2004 PANEL STUDY: FILE STRUCTURE AND INFORMATION The data file for the AMERICAN NATIONAL ELECTION STUDY, 2004 PANEL STUDY is constructed with a single logical record for each respondent. There are 418 variables for 840 respondents. The 'version' for released study files from the 2004 Panel Study (raw ASCII data file, data descriptor statement files, or codebook files) corresponds to the date on which the file was made available to the public. The date of codebook and data descriptor files (SAS, SPSS, and STATA statement files) appears at the head of the file. When a new raw ASCII data file is released, the variable VERSION identifies the date of the file. >> 2004 PANEL STUDY: PROCESSING INFORMATION The data collection was processed according to standard processing procedures. The data were checked for inconsistent code values which, when found, were corrected or recoded to missing data values. Consistency checks were performed. Annotation was added by the processors for explanatory purposes. >> 2004 PANEL STUDY: CODEBOOK INFORMATION EXAMPLE OF CODEBOOK VARIABLE DOCUMENTATION 01 ======================================================================== 02 V035246 Q9a. Party of Pres vote -party performance past 4 yrs 03 ======================================================================== 04 05 IF R VOTED: 06 IF R VOTED FOR PRESIDENT: 07 IF PRESIDENTIAL VOTE WAS FOR MAJOR PARTY CANDIDATE/ 08 IF PRESIDENTIAL VOTE WAS FOR OTHER PARTY CANDIDATE: 09 10 QUESTION: 11 --------- 12 You've indicated that you voted for the [>NAME OF MAJOR PARTY< 13 Presidential candidate/Presidential candidate from the >NAME 14 OF OTHER PARTY< party] in 2004. 15 How well has [the >NAME OF MAJOR PARTY< party/ that party] performed 16 over the past four years? Has it done a VERY GOOD job? a GOOD job? 17 A BAD job? A VERY BAD job? (in general) 18 19 INTERVIEWER INSTRUCTION: 20 ------------------------ 21 {INTERVIEWER: DO NOT PROBE DON'T KNOW} 22 23 VALID CODES: 24 ------------ 25 1. Very good job 26 2. Good job 27 3. Bad job 28 4. Very bad job 29 30 MISSING CODES: 31 -------------- 32 8. Don't know 33 9. Refused 34 INAP. 5,8,9 in C1a or 1-3,8,9 in C1b; 5,8,9 in C6; 7,8,9 in 35 Q9x; no post IW 36 37 NOTES: 38 ------ 39 Text corresponding to C6a party of vote for President was 40 included in the question text. 41 42 TYPE: 43 ----- 44 Numeric Dec 0 45 .......................................................................... NOTE: THIS EXAMPLE DOES NOT REPRESENT AN ACTUAL NES VARIABLE LINE 02 Contains identifiers, including (left to right) the variable name, the question "tag" or item number (Q9a), and the variable label. Since the variable label begins with the question tag, the question tag only appears once, as part of the variable label. LINES 05-08 This describes who is being asked the question, inverse to the INAP conditions (lines 34-35). Each line ending with ":" describes one condition that has been met to reach this question. "/" at the end of a line is equivalent to an "OR" between the condition preceding and the condition following the "/". In this example, respondents who were asked this question were respondents who 1) said they voted, and who 2) said they voted specifically for President, and who 3) voted for a major party Presidential candidate OR for another party's candidate. Note that a corresponding "/" sometimes appears in the question text when question wording varies according to which of the OR conditions applies. See lines 12-17. LINES 12-17 Several conventions are observed in codebook presentation of question text. 1) Text bracketed between ">" and "<" (line 12, line 15) indicates that case-specific text was loaded onto the instrument by the survey application. In this example, ">NAME OF MAJOR PARTY<" indicates that either "Democratic" or "Republican" was loaded into the question text, depending up which major party candidate R indicated he had voted for earlier in the questionnaire 2) Text bracketed between "[" and "]" (lines 12-14; line 15) displays text options, separated by "/". In this example, the first option is for Rs who had voted for a major party candidate; the first 2 sentences read to these respondent are: "You've indicated that you voted for the >NAME OF MAJOR PARTY< Presidential candidate in 2004. How well has the >NAME OF MAJOR PARTY< party performed over the past four years?" On the other hand, in this example, if R voted for another party's candidate, the first 2 sentences are: "You've indicated that you voted for the >NAME OF OTHER PARTY< party in 2004. How well has that party performed over the past four years?" 3) Text in parentheses (line 17) is read at the interviewer's discretion. 4) Text in CAPS, other than text bracketed with ">" "<" per 1), indicates words or phrases that appeared underlined in the instrument for emphasis. In this example (lines 16-17), the words "very good", "good", "bad", and "very bad" had appeared underlined for interviewer emphasis.. LINE 21 With few exceptions, interviewer instructions appear in the instrument immediately following the question text. LINES 34-35 INAP describes the specific paths of all respondents whom the instrument skips over the question. Each condition which results in a skip is listed, separated by ";". >> 2004 PANEL STUDY: VARIABLE DESCRIPTION LIST Variable Description --------- ------------ VERSION Study.1. Version of 2004 Panel Study Data DSETID Study.2. 2004 Panel Study Dataset ID P040001 Study.3. 2004 Panel Study Case ID P040002 Study.4. 2002 NES Pre-Election Case ID P040003 Study.5. 2000 NES Pre-Election Case ID P040101 Study.6. 2004 Panel weight P041001 Study.7. Panel participation 2000-2002-2004 P041201 Sampling.1. 2004 State Name P041201a Sampling.1a. 2004 Postal Abbreviation Of State P041202 Sampling.2. 2004 FIPS State Code P041203 Sampling.3. 2004 ICPSR State Code P041204 Sampling.4. 2004 Congressional District Number P041204a Sampling.4a. 2004 State Postal Abbrev And Congr District Number P041204b Sampling.4b. 2004 State FIPS Code And Congr District Number P041204c Sampling.4c. 2004 State ICPSR Code And Congr District Number P041205 Sampling.5. 2004 Census Region P041206 Sampling.6. 2000 NES Primary Area (PSU) Number P041207 Sampling.7. 2000 NES Segment Number P041208 Sampling.8. 2004 FIPS State-County Code P041208a Sampling.8a. 2004 FIPS County Name P041209 Sampling.9. 2004 Address - 2000 Census Tract Number P041210 Sampling.10. 2004 Address - 2000 Census Place Code P041211 Sampling.11. 2004 Address - 2000 Census MCD code P041212 Sampling.12. 2004 Address - 1990 Census MSA P041213 Sampling.13. 2004 Address - 2000 Census Urban/Rural P041214 Sampling.14. 2004 Address - 2000 Census CSA P041214a Sampling.14a. 2004 Address - 2000 Census CBSA P041215 Sampling.15. 2002 FIPS State and Congressional District P041216 Sampling.16. 2000 FIPS State and Congressional District P044001 PostAdmin.1. Form Of Post Interview P044002 PostAdmin.2. Release P044003 PostAdmin.3. Mode Of Interview P044004 PostAdmin.4. Number Of Calls P044005 PostAdmin.5. Result P044006 PostAdmin.6. Language Of Interview P044007 PostAdmin.7. Interview Verification P044008 PostAdmin.8. Interview Evaluation P044009 PostAdmin.9. Interview Tape-Recorded P044010 PostAdmin.10. Interviewed In Parts P044011 PostAdmin.11. Number Of Parts P044012 PostAdmin.12. Number Of Interviewers For Each Interview P044013a PostAdmin.13a. Interview Session 1 Interviewer ID P044013b PostAdmin.13b. Interview Session 1 Date (MMDD) P044013c PostAdmin.13c. Interview Session 1 Breakoff P044014a PostAdmin.14a. Interview Session 2 Interviewer ID P044014b PostAdmin.14b. Interview Session 2 Date (MMDD) P044014c PostAdmin.14c. Interview Session 2 Breakoff P044015a PostAdmin.15a. Interview Session 3 Interviewer ID P044015b PostAdmin.15b. Interview Session 3 Date (MMDD) P044016 PostAdmin.16. Total Length of Interview P044017 PostAdmin.17. Timezone of Interview P044018 PostAdmin.18. Date Interview Completed (MMDD) P044019 PostAdmin.19. Number Of Days After Election IW Completed P044020 PostAdmin.20. Interviewer Interview Number (nth IW) P044021 PostAdmin.21. Payment 1 Amount P044022 PostAdmin.22. Payment 1 Mode P044023 PostAdmin.23. Payment 1 Date (MMDD) P044024 PostAdmin.24. Payment 2 Amount P044025 PostAdmin.25. Payment 2 Mode P044026 PostAdmin.26. Payment 2 Date (MMDD) P044027 PostAdmin.27. Respondent Incentive P044028 PostAdmin.28. Final Persuasion Letter 12/03/2004 P044029 PostAdmin.29. Refusal Conversion Letter Sent P044029a PostAdmin.29a. Refusal Conversion Letter Type P044029b PostAdmin.29b. Refusal Conversion Letter Mail Priority P044029c PostAdmin.29c. Refusal Conversion Letter Mail Date P044101 PostIwr.1. Interviewer Of Record (IWR ID) P044102 PostIwr.2. Interviewer Gender P044103 PostIwr.3. Interviewer Education Level P044104 PostIwr.4. Interviewer Race P044105 PostIwr.5. Interviewer Ethnicity P044106 PostIwr.6. Interviewer Languages P044107 PostIwr.7. Interviewer Yrs Experience P044108 PostIwr.8. Interviewer Age (Bracketted) P044201 PostErr.1. Error Flag for Diplomacy/Military Force Items P044401 PostRand.1a. Pos Kerry - Polit Figs Thermometers P044402 PostRand.1b. Pos Cheney - Polit Figs Thermometers P044403 PostRand.1c. Pos Gore - Polit Figs Thermometers P044404 PostRand.1d. Pos Edwards - Polit Figs Thermometers P044405 PostRand.1e. Pos Nader - Polit Figs Thermometers P044406 PostRand.1f. Pos Clinton - Polit Figs Thermometers P044407 PostRand.1g. Pos Powell - Polit Figs Thermometers P044408 PostRand.1h. Pos Ashcroft - Polit Figs Thermometers P044409 PostRand.1j. Pos Jackson - Polit Figs Thermometers P044410 PostRand.1k. Pos Laura Bush - Polit Figs Thermometers P044411 PostRand.1m. Pos Hillary Clinton - Polit Figs Thermometers P044412 PostRand.2a. Pos Supreme Crt-Group Therms P044413 PostRand.2b. Pos Congress-Group Therms P044414 PostRand.2c. Pos Military-Group Therms P044415 PostRand.2d. Pos Federal Govt-Group Therms P044416 PostRand.2e. Pos Blacks-Group Therms P044417 PostRand.2f. Pos Whites-Group Therms P044418 PostRand.2g. Pos Conservatives-Group Therms P044419 PostRand.2h. Pos Liberals-Group Therms P044420 PostRand.2j. Pos Unions-Group Therms P044421 PostRand.2k. Pos Big Business-Group Therms P044422 PostRand.2m. Pos Poor People-Group Therms P044423 PostRand.2n. Pos People On Welfare-Group Therms P044424 PostRand.2p. Pos Hispanics-Group Therms P044425 PostRand.2q. Pos Christian Fundam-Group Therms P044426 PostRand.2r. Pos Elderly-Group Therms P044427 PostRand.2s. Pos Environmentalists-Group Therms P044428 PostRand.2t. Pos Homosexuals-Group Therms P044429 PostRand.2u. Pos Catholics-Group Therms P044430 PostRand.2v. Pos Jews-Group Therms P044431 PostRand.2w. Pos Protestants-Group Therms P044432 PostRand.2y. Pos Feminists-Group Therms P044433 PostRand.2z. Pos Asian-Americans-Group Therms P044434 PostRand.2za. Pos News Media-Group Therms P044435 PostRand.2zb. Pos Catholic Church-Group Therms P044436 PostRand.2zc. Pos Men-Group Therms P044437 PostRand.2zd. Pos Women-Group Therms P044438 PostRand.3a. AIDS Research - Fed Spending P044439 PostRand.3b. Welfare - Fed Spending P044440 PostRand.3c. Public/Big-City Schools - Fed Spending P044441 PostRand.3d. Crime - Fed Spending P044442 PostRand.3e. Child Care - Fed Spending P044443 PostRand.3f. Homeland Sec/War On Terror - Fed Spending P044444 PostRand.3g. Poor/Working Poor - Fed Spending P044445 PostRand.3h. Foreign Aid - Fed Spending P044446 PostRand.3j. Social Security - Fed Spending P044447 PostRand.3k. Border Security - Fed Spending P044448 PostRand.3m. Aid To Blacks - Fed Spending P044449 PostRand.3n. Early Education - Fed Spending P044450 PostRand.3p. Defense - Fed Spending P044451 PostRand.4. Public/Big-City Schools Wording P044452 PostRand.5. Homeland Sec/War On Terrorism Wording P044453 PostRand.6. Poor People/Working Poor Wording P044454 PostRand.7. Early Ed For Poor/Black Children Wording P044455 PostRand.8a. Pos Provides Strong Leadership Trait P044456 PostRand.8b. Pos Moral Trait P044457 PostRand.8c. Pos Out Of Touch Trait P044458 PostRand.8d. Pos Knowledgeable Trait P044459 PostRand.9a. Pos Provides Strong Leadership Trait P044460 PostRand.9b. Pos really Cares Trait P044461 PostRand.9c. Pos Dishonest Trait P044462 PostRand.9d. Pos Intelligent Trait P044463 PostRand.10. Order Party Plcmnt Diplomacy Scale P044464 PostRand.11. Order rich/Poor Pay Taxes P044465 PostRand.12. Order Party Plcmnt Govt Services P044466 PostRand.13. Order Party Plcmnt Affirm Action P044467 PostRand.14. Order Party Plcment Equal Pay Women P044468 PostRand.15. Order Working Women Items P044501 PostCand.1. 2004 House Type race P044502 PostCand.2. 2004 Senate Type race P044503a PostCand.3a. 2000-2002 Move Status P044503b PostCand.3b. 2002-2004 Move Status P044503c PostCand.3c. 2000-2004 Move Status P044504a PostCand.4a. 2000-2002 Change in district number P044504b PostCand.4b. 2002-2004 Change in district number P044504c PostCand.4c. 2000-2004 Change in district number P044505a PostCand.5a. 2000-2002 District Status P044505b PostCand.5b. 2002-2004 District Status P044505c PostCand.5c. 2000-2004 District Status P044506 PostCand.6. 2000-2002 Same House Candidates P044506a PostCand.6a. 2002-2004 Same House Candidates P044506b PostCand.6b. 2004 House Retiree Status in 2002 P045001 Q1.f2a2. Watch Campaign TV Programs P045002 Q2.f2a3. R Discuss Politics With Family/Friends P045002a Q3.f2a3a. How Often R Discuss Politics P045003 Q4.f1q1.Did R Vote In 2000 Presidential Election P045003a Q5.f1q1a. R Vote Choice 2000 Presidential Election P045004 Q7.f1q2c. 2000 Presidential Elect Fair/Unfair P045004a Q8.f1q2c1. How Fair/Unfair 2000 Presidential Elect P045004x Q9.f1q2cx. How Fair/Unfair 2000 Pres Elect-Summary P045005 Q10.f1a12. App/Disapp GW Bush Handling Job As Pres P045005a Q11.f1a12a. Strength App/Disapp GW Bush Job As Pres P045005x Q12.f1a12x. App/Disapp GW Bush Job As Pres-Summary P045006 Q13.f1h5. Approve/Disapp GW Bush Handling Economy P045006a Q14.f1h5a. Strength App/Disapp GW Bush On Economy P045006x Q15.f1h5x. App/Disapp GW Bush On Economy-Summary P045007 Q16.f1c1a. George W. Bush Thermometer P045008 Q17.f1c1a1. John Kerry Thermometer P045009 Q18.f1c1b. Dick Cheney Thermometer P045010 Q19.f1c1c. Al Gore Thermometer P045011 Q20.f1c1d. John Edwards Thermometer P045012 Q21.f1c1e. Ralph Nader Thermometer P045013 Q22.f1c1f. Bill Clinton Thermometer P045014 Q23.f1c1h. Colin Powell Thermometer P045015 Q24.f1c1j. John Ashcroft Thermometer P045016 Q25.f1c1m. Jesse Jackson Thermometer P045017 Q26.f1c1p. Laura Bush Thermometer P045018 Q27.f1c1r. Hillary Clinton Thermometer P045019 Q28.f2d2a. Supreme Court Thermometer P045020 Q29.f2d2b. Congress Thermometer P045021 Q30.f2d2c. Military Thermometer P045022 Q31.f2d2d. Federal Government Thermometer P045023 Q32.f2d2e. Blacks Thermometer P045024 Q33.f2d2f. Whites Thermometer P045025 Q34.f2d2g. Conservatives Thermometer P045026 Q35.f2d2h. Liberals Thermometer P045027 Q36.f2d2j. Labor Unions Thermometer P045028 Q37.f2d2k. Big Business Thermometer P045029 Q38.f2d2m. Poor People Thermometer P045030 Q39.f2d2n. People On Welfare Thermometer P045031 Q40.f2d2p. Hispanics Thermometer P045032 Q41.f2d2q. Christian Fundamentalists Thermometer P045033 Q42.f2d2r. Elderly Thermometer P045034 Q43.f2d2s. Environmentalists Thermometer P045035 Q44.f2d2t. Gay Men And Lesbians Thermometer P045036 Q45.f2d2u. Catholics Thermometer P045037 Q46.f2d2v. Jews Thermometer P045038 Q47.f2d2w. Protestants Thermometer P045039 Q48.f2d2y. Feminists Thermometer P045040 Q49.f2d2z. Asian-Americans Thermometer P045041 Q50.f2d2za. News Media Thermometer P045042 Q51.f2d2zb. Catholic Church Thermometer P045043 Q52.f2d2zc. Men Thermometer P045044 Q53.f2d2zd. Women Thermometer P045045a Q54.f2c1a. R 2004 Voter Turnout-Traditional P045045b Q55.f2c1b. R 2004 Voter Turnout-Experimental P045045x Q56.f2c1x. R 2004 Voter Turnout-Summary P045046 Q57.f2c2. Was Non-Voter R Registered To Vote P045047 Q58.f2c2a. Was Voter R Registered In Preload State P045047a Q59.f2c2a1. State Voter R Registered P045048x Q60.f2c2x. Voter Registration Status-Summary P045049 Q61.f2c3. Did R Vote For President P045049a Q62.f2c3a. Presidential Vote Choice P045050 Q64.f2c3a1. Strength Presidential Cand Pref P045051 Q65.f2c3b. Timing Of Presidential Vote Decision P045052 Q68.f2c11a. Did R Vote For US House Of Rep P045053 Q69.f2c11a1. US House Of Rep - R Vote Choice P045054x Q71.f2c15ax. Checkpoint: Senate Race In State P045054 Q72.f2c15a. Did R Vote For US Senate P045055 Q73.f2c15a1. US Senate R Vote Choice P045056 Q75.f2c20. 2004 Elections Fair/Unfair P045057 Q76.f2f5. R Follow Govt And Public Affairs P045058 Q77.f1j1. R Consider Self Dem/Rep/Ind/Other P045058a Q79.f1j1a. Strength R Considers Self Dem/Rep P045058b Q80.f1j1b. Is R Closer To Dem/Rep Party P045058x Q81.f1j1x. Summary-R Party Preference P045059 Q82.f2b1. Parties Talk To R About Campaign P045059a Q83.f2b1a. Which Party Spoke To R About Campaign P045060 Q85.f2b9. Anyone Talk To R About Reg/Vote P045061 Q86.f2b2. R Try To Influence Vote Of Others P045062 Q87.f2b3. R Display Campaign Button/Sticker P045063 Q88.f2b4. R Attend Candidate Meetings/Rallies P045064 Q89.f2b5. R Do Other Work For Party/Candidate P045065 Q90.f2b6. Did R Give Money To Candidate P045066 Q91.f2b7. Did R Give Money To Political Party P045067 Q92.f2b8. Did R Give Money To Any Other Group P045068 Q93.f1k2a. Environmental Protection-Federal Spending P045069 Q94.f1k1b. AIDS Research-Federal Spending P045070 Q95.f1k1c. Welfare-Federal Spending P045071a Q96.f1k1d1a. Public Schools-Federal Spending P045071b Q97.f1k1d1b. Big-City Schools-Federal Spending P045071x Q98.f1k1d1. Public/Big-City Schools-Summary P045072 Q99.f1k1e. Crime-Federal Spending P045073 Q100.f1k1f. Child Care-Federal Spending P045074a Q101.f1k1g1a. Homeland Security-Federal Spending P045074b Q102.f1k1g1b. War On Terrorism-Federal Spending P045074x Q103.f1k1g1x. Homeland Sec/War On Terrorism-Summary P045075a Q104.f1k2b1a. Aid To Poor People-Federal Spending P045075b Q105.f1j2b1b. Aid To Working Poor-Federal Spending P045075x Q106.f1k2b1x. Aid To Poor/Working Poor-Summary P045076 Q107.f1k2c. Foreign Aid-Federal Spending P045077 Q108.f1k2d. Social Security-Federal Spending P045078 Q109.f1k2e. Border Security-Federal Spending P045079 Q110.f1k2f. Aid To Blacks - Federal Spending P045080a Q111.f1k2h1a. Early Ed For Poor Children-Federal Spending P045080b Q112.f1k2h1b. Early Ed For Black Children-Federal Spending P045080x Q113.f1k2h1x. Early Ed for Poor/Black Children-Summary P045081 Q114.f2l1b. Defense - Federal Spending P045082 Q115.f1q3c. What Terrorists Wanted To Accomplish P045083 Q118.f1q3e. How Likely Another Terrorist Attack P045084x Q119.f1q3gx. Checkpoint: F1Q3g Wording P045084a Q120.f1q3g. App/Disapp Bush War On Terrorism/9-11 P045085a Q121.f1q3g2a. Strength App/Disapp Bush War On Terrorism P045085b Q122.f1q3g2b. Strength App/Disapp Bush-911 P045085x Q123.f1q3g2x. Strength App/Disapp Bush Resp-Summary P045086 Q124.f1q4a4. War In Afghanistan Worth Cost P045087 Q125.f1q4a4a. War In Iraq Worth Cost P045088 Q126.f1g1. R Better/Worse Off In Last Year P045089 Q127.f1g1a. R How Much Better/Worse Off In Last Yr P045089x Q128.f1g1ax. R How Much Better/Worse Off-Summary P045090 Q129.f1h1. US Economy Better/Worse In Last Yr P045091 Q130.f1h1a. Extent US Econ Better/Worse In Last Yr P045091x Q131.f1h1ax. Extent US Econ Better/Worse-Summary P045092 Q132.f2m10d. Extent of Campaign Finance Reform P045093 Q133.f1r1a. Has R Shown Flag In Past 12 Months P045094 Q134.f1j4d. Things About US Make R Ashamed P045095 Q135.f2t7a. How Good Does US Flag Make R Feel P045096 Q136.f2t7b. How Strong Is Rs Love For Country P045097 Q137.f2d3a. Bush Trait-Leadership P045097a Q137.f2d3a1. Bush Trait-Leadership, 1st Traits Set P045097b Q137.f2d3a2. Bush Trait-Leadership, 2nd Traits Set P045098 Q138.f2d3b. Bush Trait-Moral P045099 Q139.f2d3c. Bush Trait-Out Of Touch P045100 Q140.f2d3d. Bush Trait-Knowledgeable P045101 Q141.f2d4b. Bush Trait-Cares About People P045102 Q142.f2d4c. Bush Trait-Dishonest P045103 Q143.f2d4d. Bush Trait- Intelligent P045104 Q144.f1h6a. Diplomacy/Military Force Scale P045105 Q145.f1h6a2. Diplomacy/Military Scale-GW Bush P045106 Q146.f1h6a3. Diplomacy/Military Scale-Democrats P045107 Q147.f1h6a4. Diplomacy/Military Scale-Republicans P045108 Q148.f1h6a1. Diplomacy/Military-Importance To R P045109 Q149.f1l5. Increase/Decrease Immigration P045110 Q150.f1l6. Abortion Issue - Self-Placement P045111 Q152.f1l7. Fav/Opp Laws Protect Homosexuals P045112 Q153.f1l7a. Strngth Fav/Opp Laws Protect Homosexuals P045112x Q154.f1l7ax. Fav/Opp Laws Protect Homosexuals-Summary P045113 Q155.f1h15a. Equal Treatment For Women In Jobs Issue P045113a Q156.f1h15a1. Govt Ensure Equal Treatment For Women P045114 Q158.f1h15a2. Strngth Govt Ensure Equal Treat Women P045114x Q159.f1h15a2x. Strngth Govt Equal Treat Women-Summary P045115 Q160.f1h16. What Happens To Women Affect R P045115a Q161.f1h16a1. What Happens To Women Affect R How Much P045116 Q162.f1h16b. Rs Sense of Pride As A Woman P045117 Q163.f1h16c. Is R Angry About Way Women Treated P045118 Q164.f1l1a. Last 20 Yrs Change In Income Inequality P045118a Q165.f1l1a1. How Much Diff In Income Inequality P045118x Q165x.f1l1ax. Diff In Income Inequality - Summary P045118b Q166.f1l1a2. Income Inequality Good Or Bad P045119 Q167.f1l11a. R Think Pay More/Less Taxes Than Shld P045120 Q168.f1l11b. Rich Pay More/Less Than Shld In Taxes P045121 Q169.f1l11c. Poor Pay More/Less Than Shld In Taxes P045122x Q170.f1m2at. Checkpoint: F1M2 Wording P045122 Q171.f1m2a. Did R Favor/Oppose Tax Cut P045123a Q173.f1m2b1. Strength Fav/Opp Tax Cut-Congress Wording P045123b Q174.f1m2b2. Strength Fav/Opp Tax Cut-GW Bush Wording P045123x Q175.f1m2bx. Strength R Fav/Opp Tax Cut-Summary P045124 Q176.f1m2c. Dem Party Fav/Opp Tax Cut P045125 Q178.f1m2e. Rep Party Fav/Opp Tax Cut P045126 Q180.f1m2n. Importance Of Tax Cut Issue To R P045127 Q181.f2k7a. Fewer/More Govt Services-Rs Placement P045128 Q182.f2k7b. Fewer/More Govt Services-GW Bush P045129 Q183.f2k7c. Fewer/More Govt Services-Dem Party P045130 Q184.f2k7d. Fewer/More Govt Service-Rep Party P045131 Q185.f2k7a1. Fewer/More Govt Service-Import to R P045132 Q186.f2m5aa. Affirmative Action-Rs Position P045133 Q188.f2m5a. Affirmative Action-GW Bush Position P045134 Q190.f2m5b. Affirmative Action-Dem Party Position P045135 Q192.f2m5c. Affirmative Action-Rep Party Position P045136 Q194.f2m5d. Affirm Action-Importance To R P045137 Q195.f2m6. Govt Ensure Equal Pay For Women P045138 Q196.f2m6a. GW Bush On Equal Pay For Women P045139 Q197.f2m6a1. Dem Party On Equal Pay For Women P045140 Q198.f2m6b. Rep Party On Equal Pay For Women P045141 Q199.f2m6c. Equal Pay For Women - Importance To R P045142 Q200.f1h9. US Position In World-Weaker/Stronger P045143 Q201.f1h12. Agree/Disagree US Should Stay Home P045144 Q202.f2n2b. R Well-Qualified For Political Partic P045145 Q203.f2n2c. R Better Informed Than Most People P045146 Q204.f2n3. Doesn't Matter Whether Vote Or Not P045147 Q205.f2q1a. Public Officials Don't Care P045148 Q206.f2q1b. People Like Me Have No Say P045149 Q207.f2q3a. Trust Govt To Do What Is Right P045150 Q208.f2q4. Govt Wastes Tax Money P045151 Q209.f2q5. Govt Run By Big Interests/Benefit Of All P045152 Q210.f2q6. How Many In Govt Crooked P045153 Q211.f2q7. How Much Elections Make Govt Pay Attn P045154 Q212.f2t6. Satisfaction With How US Democracy Works P045155 Q213.f2t8a. Working Mother Vs Non-Working Mother P045156 Q214.f2t8b. Better If Man Is Achiever Outside Home P045157 Q215.f2t8c. Women Want Equality/Special Favors P045158 Q216.f2k3. Can People Be Trusted P045159 Q217.f2k4. People Take Advantage/Be Fair P045160 Q218.f2k5. People Helpful/Looking Out For Themselves P045161 Q219.f2k2. R Able To Do Volunteer Work Past Year P045162 Q220.f2m12a. R Worked With Others On Community Issue P045163 Q221.f2m12b. Rs Views To Govt In Past Year P045164 Q222.f2m12c. Attend Mtg For School/Comm In Past Yr P045165 Q223.f2m12d. R Member Of Any Organization P045166 Q224.f2m12e. R Give To Church/Charity In Past Year P045167 Q225.f2m12f. R In Protest/March/Demonstration P045168 Q226.f2z1. R Worked With Neighbors On Issue/Problem P045169 Q227.f2z2. Rs Neighbors Out For Themselves P045170 Q228.f2z3a. Rs Neighbors Try To Take Advantage P045171 Q229.f2z3b. Rs Neighbors Treat Others With Respect P045172 Q230.f2z3c. Honest Describes Rs Neighbors P045173 Q231.f1n1. Religion Important Part of Rs Life P045173a Q232.f1n1a. How Important Religion In Rs Life P045174 Q233.f1n3. Does R Attend Religious Services P045174a Q234.f1n3a. How Often R Attends Religious Services P045174b Q235.f1n3a1. Attends Once A Week/More Than Weekly P045175 Q236.f1n4. R Active Member At Place Of Worship P045175a Q237.f1n4a. R Planned Mtg At Place Of Worship P045175b Q238.f1n4b. R Given Speech At Place Of Worship P045176 Q239.f3y2. Rs Marital Status P045177 Q240.f3y3. R Attend Undergrad College/University P045178x Q246.f3y4x. Rs Employment Status-Summary P045179a Q247.f3y8a. R Planned/Chaired Mtg At Work P045179b Q248.f3y8b. R Given Presentation/Speech At Work P045180a Q249.f3z6a. Is Rs Family Income More/Less Than 50K P045180b Q250.f3z6b. Category Family Income If More Than 50K P045180c Q251.f3z6c. Category Family Income If Less Than 50K P045180x Q252.f3z6x. Rs Family Income-Summary P045181 Q253.f3z4. R Have Money In Stock Market P045182 Q254.f3z5b. Family Medicare Benefits P045183 Q255.f3z5c. Family Medicaid Benefits P045184 Q256.f3z5g. Family Retirement Account/Pension P045185a Q257.f3z7e1. Rs Race/Ethnicity-Mention 1 P045185b Q258.f3z7e2. Rs Race/Ethnicity-Mention 2 P045185c Q259.f3z7e3. Rs Race/Ethnicity-Mention 3 P045185x Q260.f3z7ex. Summary: Rs Race/Ethnicity P045186x Q263.f3z8x. Checkpoint-Hispanic Mention In F3Z7e P045187 Q264.f3z9. Is R Spanish/Of Hispanic Origin P045188x Q265.f3z9ax. Summary: Is R Spanish/Of Hispanic Origin P045188 Q266.f3z9a. If R Hispanic - Type P045189x Q271.f3z1x. Summary: How Long In Present Community P045190x Q275.f3z2x. Summary: How Long In Current Home P045191 Q276.f3z3. Does R/Rs Family Own Home/Pay Rent P045192 Q277a. Respondent gender (preload) P045193 Q277b. Respondent age (preload) P045201 Q278.f4z4. IWR - Rs Cooperation P045202 Q279.f4z5. IWR - Rs Level of Political Info P045203 Q280.f4z6. IWR - Rs Apparent Intelligence P045204 Q281.f4z7. IWR - How Suspicious R Before Study P045205 Q282.f4z8. IWR - Rs Interest In Interview P045206 Q283.f4z9. IWR - Rs Sincerity P045206a Q284.f4z9a. IWR - Doubted Rs Sincerity P045209 Q295.f4prob1. IWR - Difficulty Admin IW By Phone