political party, poltical rally, public opinion of politics, strong views on politics
Q. Please indicate the extent to which you agree or disagree with each of the following statements:
Total Agree |
Total Disagree |
Strongly Agree |
Agree |
Disagree |
Strongly Disagree |
No opinion |
|
Political action can change the world |
74% |
16% |
20% |
54% |
12% |
4% |
11% |
There is a difference in the values of the major political parties |
66% |
25% |
17% |
49% |
21% |
4% |
10% |
I have never attended a political event |
66% |
26% |
37% |
29% |
16% |
10% |
8% |
All politicians are basically the same |
53% |
39% |
14% |
39% |
30% |
9% |
7% |
I have strong views about politics |
47% |
43% |
13% |
34% |
30% |
13% |
10% |
I have attended a political rally or meeting in the 3 years |
12% |
80% |
4% |
8% |
25% |
55% |
9% |
I am, or have been, a member of a political party |
11% |
80% |
3% |
8% |
24% |
56% |
9% |
A vast majority of respondents believe that ‘political action can change the world’ (74%). A majority also believe that ‘there is a difference in the values of the major political parties’ (66%), state that ‘I have never attended a political event’ (66%) and believe that ‘all politicians are basically the same’ (53%). In terms of political activity, only 12% of respondents had attended a political rally or meeting in the last 3 years and only 11% are, or were, a member of a political party.
Looking at the results by age, older respondents are more likely to agree that ‘political action can change the world’ (83% total agree 55-64 and 65+). Those aged 65+ are also the most likely to agree that ‘there is a difference in the values of the major political parties’ (82% total agree).
Older respondents are also more likely to consider themselves as having strong views about politics, with 53% of those aged 55-64 agreeing with this statement and 63% of those aged 65+ agreeing. Attendance of political rallies or meetings declined with age, with respondents aged 18-24 the most likely to have attended a rally or meeting (17%), moving incrementally down at each age bracket to 6% of respondents aged 65+.