Skip Main Navigation
|
| Skip Section Navigation
Levitt Center
Faculty-Student Collaboration
|
The Hamilton College Patriotism Poll
Released: March 20, 2003
Executive Summary
The Hamilton College Patriotism Poll, a national survey of the high
school graduating class of 2003, gauges attitudes toward patriotism,
military service, the pending war in Iraq and related topics. The
survey of 1,001 high school seniors was conducted from March 12 to
March 18, 2003. Before the March 17 polling began, the Bush
administration signaled that war with Iraq was likely within days, a
message that was strongly reinforced by President Bush's somber speech
that evening. Since imminence of war is likely to inflate
patriotic feelings, this report pays special attention to the
differences between the attitudes expressed during the early polling
sessions (on March 12 through 16) and the later (March 17-18) polling
period.
The Patriotism Poll was designed and analyzed by Hamilton College
researchers and administered by the polling firm Zogby International.
The survey was funded by Hamilton's Arthur Levitt Public Affairs Center
and has an expected margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3
percent.
Here are 11 key findings from the poll. (Detailed results can
be found in the appendix, which includes question wording and
statistics.)
- This year's high school seniors are moderately patriotic by their
own descriptions. When they were asked to place themselves on a
0-to-10 patriotism scale, the average response was 6.4 (Question
16). Given a choice of rating themselves Extremely, Very,
Somewhat or Not Patriotic, few chose Extremely Patriotic, 41 percent
chose Very Patriotic, but 40 percent chose Slightly Patriotic.
(Question 15)
- According to self-reports, the students are less patriotic than
adults. In a Gallup Poll conducted in January 2002, 24 percent of
adults rated themselves Extremely Patriotic and only 24 percent
considered themselves Slightly Patriotic.
- Ethnic variation in patriotic feelings is enormous.
Sixty-one percent of white high school seniors rate themselves
Extremely or Very Patriotic, compared with 34 percent of blacks, 38
percent of Hispanics and 42 percent of Asians.
- There is a large gap in patriotic feelings among high school
seniors between Democrats and Republicans. Seventy-two percent of
Republicans consider themselves Extremely or Very Patriotic, compared
with 41 of Democrats, and 48 percent of Independents.
- The students want others to respect national symbols.
Seventy-two said that they would be offended by someone carrying on a
conversation while the national anthem was being played at a sports
event. Fifty-nine percent indicated they would be offended by someone
refusing to stand while the Pledge of Allegiance was being recited.
(Questions 18 and 19)
- The apparent imminence of war with Iraq has modestly affected
student patriotism. Polling on Monday and Tuesday of this week
(March 17 and 18) reflected the changing atmosphere. The
proportion rating themselves Extremely Patriotic rose from 11 to 19
percent from the earlier polling sessions to the Monday-Tuesday
polling. Very Patriotic responses dropped from 43 to 37
percent. Slightly Patriotic responses inched from 39 to 40
percent, and Not Patriotic declined from 7 to 4 percent.
- Few high school seniors want to join the military. Many
would try to avoid service if drafted. Only nine percent
say they plan to join the armed forces within the next year. (Question
24) Asked what they would do if drafted, 58 percent said
they would accept induction, 32 percent said they would avoid service
if they could do so legally, and 8 percent indicated that they would
refuse to serve "no matter what." (Question 28)
- High school seniors are not sympathetic to the idea of restarting
the draft, but are more receptive to the concept of national
service. If there is a draft, most think that both men and women
should be called. Only 18 percent think that
restarting the draft would be a good idea (Question 26). Sixty
percent believe that both men and women should be called for service if
there is a draft (Question 27). Fifty-six percent say they
would support a national service system that allowed young people to
choose between military service and "a civilian service job such as
working in a hospital or at an airport security checkpoint."(Question
29)
- High school seniors consider protesters against war with Iraq to
be "Patriotic." Respondents were asked if the anti-war protestors
were "Unpatriotic because they are taking the side of another country
against the United States" or "Patriotic because they are exercising
their rights as citizens to protest policies they believe are
wrong." Sixty-three percent say the protestors are
Patriotic. (Question 17)
- Most high school seniors support a war against Iraq.
Two-thirds would approve of the U.S. taking military action to remove
Saddam Hussein from power. This proportion has barely budged in
the last two days. When the earlier polling sessions were
compared to the later Monday-Tuesday sessions, were the percentage
supporting military action rose from 65 to 67 percent, a statistically
insignificant change. (Question 30)
- About half of high school seniors think that the President is
"too anxious" to go to war. Many of those who support war think
that the UN and weapons inspectors should be given "more time"
(Question 31). A separate question asked whether President
Bush is "too anxious to go to war with Iraq" or "wants to avoid war
unless there is no other way to protect the security of the United
States." The proportion who think Mr. Bush too anxious for
war was 56 percent in the early polling sessions, but dropped to 48
percent during the Monday-Tuesday polling. (Question 32)
|