A Black/Non-Black Theory of African-American Partisanship: Hostility, Racial Consciousness and the Republican Party Page: 59
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For whites in the period 1969-1967, Table 3.4, Care Who Wins Presidential Race
(.064) and Mother's Party Identification (.421) positively associates with partisanship.
Important Party Differences (-.063), GOP Guaranteed Jobs (-.054) and GOP Aid-to-
Blacks (-.024) negatively and weakly associate with Republican partisanship. Whites,
too, recognize that the Republican Party does not pursue policies designed to guarantee
jobs or aid blacks, but this is considerably less significant to whites than it is to whites.
Importantly, the overall strength of significance is less for whites than the strength of
significance is for blacks.
Table 3.4
Correlation Coefficients Differences GOPJobs ID
Blacks
Care Who Wins Pres. Race 0.064 1.000
Important Party Differences -0.063 0.037 1.000
GOP -Guaranteed Jobs -0.054 0.064 -0.036 1.000
Mother's Party ID 0.421 0.043 -0.020 0.010 1.000
GOP - Aid to Blacks -0.024 0.033 0.008 0.331 0.008 1.000
Mean 3.870 1.640 1.820 4.530 1.870 4.070
Std. Deviation 2.048 0.479 1.401 1.528 0.996 1.410
N 1359
For blacks in the period 1977-1980, Table 3.5, Mother's Party Identification
(.237) again positively associates with partisanship. Which Party Would Handle Most
Important Problem (.233) moderately and positively associates with partisanship. Not
surprisingly, this moved in a positive direction as Republican partisanship positively
associates with the assumption that the GOP could handle the most important problem.
GOP Presidential Candidate Aid-to-Blacks (.028) weakly and positively associates with
partisanship. Each of the following variables: Care Who Wins Presidential Race (-.331),
Important Party Differences (-.219), GOP Guaranteed Jobs (-.137), and GOP Aid-to-
Blacks (-.146) negatively associate with Republican partisanship. Unlike with the59
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King, Marvin. A Black/Non-Black Theory of African-American Partisanship: Hostility, Racial Consciousness and the Republican Party, dissertation, May 2006; Denton, Texas. (https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc5264/m1/70/: accessed April 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, UNT Digital Library, https://digital.library.unt.edu; .