Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:4050Hits:20976170Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID119671
Title ProperSteeped in international affairs?
Other Title Informationthe foreign policy views of the tea party
LanguageENG
AuthorRathbun, Brian
Publication2013.
Summary / Abstract (Note)The Tea Party is a powerful new force in American domestic politics, but little is known about its supporters' views on foreign affairs. New survey data indicates that supporters of the Tea Party exhibit attitudes on international relations consistent with the Jacksonian tradition in American political thought but not, as some have maintained, isolationist opinions of the Jeffersonian variety. Jacksonians are supporters of a strong defense and a large military presence abroad and are opposed to Wilsonian global idealism. The article operationalizes support for these three different foreign policy traditions by connecting them to previous findings on the structure of American foreign policy. The effect of Tea Party affiliation on foreign policy attitudes is severely weakened, however, once we control for political ideology, particularly economic conservatism. As is the case in domestic politics, Tea Party sympathizers seem to be somewhat ordinary conservatives, not a completely new breed. There is a direct parallel between their domestic attitudes and their foreign policy attitudes. Their lack of support for idealistic policies abroad, their most prominent set of attitudes, is part and parcel of a lack of social solidarity indicated in their more economically libertarian position at home.
`In' analytical NoteForeign Policy Analysis Vol. 9, No.1; Jan 2013: p.21-37
Journal SourceForeign Policy Analysis Vol. 9, No.1; Jan 2013: p.21-37
Key WordsTea Party ;  American Domestic Politics ;  Foreign Affairs ;  American Political Thought ;  International Relations ;  Wilsonian Global Idealism ;  American Foreign Policy ;  America