Tennesseans evenly split statewide on governor’s school voucher proposal
But whites more opposed
than minorities, especially in Middle and West Tennessee
MURFREESBORO,
Tenn. –
Tennesseans remain divided statewide on Gov. Bill Haslam’s plan to spend state
money on private schooling for poor children in failing public schools, but
views differ sharply by race and region, the latest MTSU Poll shows.
Conducted Feb. 11-19, the telephone poll of 650
randomly selected Tennessee adults found 46 percent opposed to the plan but 40
percent in support of it — a statistical “dead heat,” given the poll’s
four-percentage-point error margin. Another 12 percent of Tennesseans said they
did not know, and the remaining 2 percent declined to answer.
“Statewide, it’s too close to call,” said Dr. Ken
Blake, director of the poll at Middle Tennessee State University. “Opponents of
the plan outnumbered supporters in our sample, but it’s unclear whether the
same is true among all Tennesseans. They appear evenly, or nearly evenly,
divided.”
However, opinions on the governor’s proposal divide
sharply by race, with 63 percent of minorities in favor compared to only 37
percent of whites. Twenty-eight percent of minorities oppose the measure, while
the rest give no answer. By contrast, 48 percent of whites oppose the plan,
while the rest give no answer.
An analysis of attitudes just among whites found
whites in Middle Tennessee significantly more opposed (53 percent) than in
favor (33 percent) with 12 percent undecided and the rest giving no answer. A
similar pattern emerged among whites in West Tennessee, with 53 percent
opposed, 28 percent in favor, 17 percent undecided and the rest giving no
answer. Whites in East Tennessee were evenly divided, with 44 percent opposed,
43 percent in favor, 11 percent undecided and the rest giving no answer.
“Thus, a more nuanced analysis finds support for
school vouchers strongest among the state’s minorities and opposition strongest
among whites, especially those in the state’s Middle and Western regions,”
Blake said.
Attitudes toward the plan are statistically uniform
across party affiliation, with 38 percent of the governor’s fellow Republicans
supporting the measure compared to 41 percent of independents and 45 percent of
Democrats. The question asked respondents, “Suppose a child in Tennessee is
poor and is attending a public school that is among the bottom 5 percent in
overall achievement. Would you favor or oppose using state money to send such a
child to a private school?”
Meanwhile, Tennesseans give the quality of the
state’s public schools about a “C” on average but give the quality of their
local schools a significantly higher “C-plus” on average. Specifically, 8
percent give school quality statewide an “A,” while 28 percent give it a “B,”
36 percent give it a “C,” 8 percent give it a “D,” 6 percent give it an “F,”
and 14 percent don’t know or decline to answer. By contrast, 18 percent give
the quality of their local schools an “A,” 36 percent give it a “B,” 22 percent
give it a “C,” 7 percent give it a “D,” 6 percent give it an “F,” and 11
percent don’t know or decline to answer.
(MORE)
As was the case in the Fall 2011 MTSU Poll,
Tennesseans in the “doughnut” of counties circling Metro Nashville are
significantly happier with the quality of their local public schools than are
residents of Metro Nashville and Tennesseans living in West Tennessee. “Doughnut”
dwellers give their local school quality a “B” on average, while West
Tennesseans give their local school quality a “C-plus,” and Metro Nashville
residents give their local school quality closer to a “C.”
Poll data were collected by Issues and Answers
Network Inc. using balanced, random samples of Tennessee landline and cell
phones. The data were weighted to match the latest available Census estimates
of gender and race proportions in Tennessee.
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