Abstract

Survey data from the 1980, 1984, and 1988 presidential elections are used to test the proposition that, contrary to the age-old stereotype of Jewish avarice, Jewish Americans are largely immune to "pocketbook voting"--the tendency to support or oppose the in-party candidate on the basis of improving or deteriorating personal economic circumstances. A vote choice model fitted simultaneously for Jews, Catholics, and Protestants indicates that pocketbook voting is no less prominent among Jews than gentiles, a finding in sharp contrast to the conventional wisdom about Jewish electoral behavior.

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