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Gallup last year: Plurality of Americans have never heard of Antonin Scalia
Hotair ^ | 02/17/2016 | AllahPundit

Posted on 02/17/2016 9:14:31 AM PST by SeekAndFind

Normally here’s where I’d say “this isn’t America” except that this really is America, a land where 10 percent of college graduates think Judge Judy is on the Supreme Court.

Scalia passing right at the moment that Trump is poised to take over the GOP feels like some sort of Biblical omen.

g1

Follow the link up top to Gallup’s article and you’ll find some data that’ll likely shock you as much as it shocked me: Even among conservatives, Scalia’s net favorable rating as of last summer stood at just +6. (Among Democrats, his rating was net -7. Who would have guessed that the spread between left and right on a lightning rod like Antonin Scalia was a mere 13 points?) As recently as 10 years ago, Scalia was a solid +36 among conservatives. What happened? I think Gallup’s read on that shift is correct, that it has little to do with Scalia himself and everything to do with growing contempt for the Court generally among the wider population, including on the right. There are many conservatives, I’m sure, who know enough about the Court to know who Scalia is but who follow Court news too casually to follow how the individual justices voted in high-profile cases. How many Americans, even on the right, know who wrote the majority opinion in Heller? How many could tell you how Scalia voted in the drumbeat of cases expanding gay rights and ultimately legalizing gay marriage? What percentage read past the headline the day the Court upheld ObamaCare to learn which five members of the Court cast the decisive votes? To some extent Scalia was a victim of Americans’ egregious civic ignorance, especially when it comes to the judiciary. He was arguably the most influential advocate for conservatism in government for fully 30 years, and even so — nothing better than +6, even among conservatives. Pitiful.

Speaking of Scalia’s popularity then and now, here’s a corker of an op-ed in the Independent Journal today by John Boehner about the 1996 presidential campaign:

The center of Dole's appeal was the opportunity to return gravitas and adult leadership to the White House. But to turn it into electoral success, nearly everyone agreed, Dole needed some rocket fuel. He needed a running mate who would act as a force multiplier for the argument that was the centerpiece of Dole's campaign, while also bringing an element of buzz and excitement that had been missing, particularly among Reagan-Gingrich conservatives yearning for a champion.

The solution, I believed, was right in front of us -- or more accurately, across the street from my hideaway office in the Capitol, in the chambers of the U.S. Supreme Court. It was a brilliant, engaging, conservative Italian-American justice with a large, Catholic family, with potential cross-generational appeal and the ability to help reconstruct the broad coalition that had made Ronald Reagan president 16 years earlier. It was a pick nobody would have seen coming, and one with the potential to ignite the Dole campaign in a manner no one thought possible.

Yes, really: Scalia for VP. John Boehner actually considered that idea seriously enough to have approached Scalia with it. I’m as amazed as Charles Cooke, who read the op-ed and titled his reply to it, “John Boehner admits to having no political instincts whatsoever.” Cooke is amazed that Boehner would think Scalia’s skill set would be better applied to the ugly business of retail politics than to rendering judicial decisions. True enough, but what I can’t get past is the idea of encouraging a sitting conservative justice to resign knowing that a president from the other party would appoint his replacement in return for nothing more substantial than the number-two slot on a ticket that was facing long odds in unseating a popular incumbent like Clinton in the first place. To refresh your memory, there were only three reliable conservative votes on the Court in 1996 — Scalia, Thomas, and Rehnquist. Kennedy and Sandra Day O’Connor made up the rest of the “conservative” majority, but both were famously unpredictable. Having Scalia step down in 1996 would have turned a delicate 5-4 right-ish majority into a 5-4 liberal one that would have controlled the Court to the present day. Unless Boehner thought that Scalia could somehow keep his Court seat while campaigning for executive office as a Republican, which seems preposterous, he would have ended up trading 20 years of control of the judiciary for five months or so of having Scalia on a Republican ticket that almost certainly would have lost badly to Clinton anyway. Amazing.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: gallup; scalia; scotus; supremecourt

1 posted on 02/17/2016 9:14:31 AM PST by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

Not a surprise at all. Most people know the President and that is about it. And the only reason they know the President is because he is mentioned all the time. Otherwise they wouldn’t know him either. Americans are very ignorant with regards to history and government. I often talk to my neighbors about current events in government and half the time before I start I have to explain who the people are before they can begin to understand the story. And these are basically intelligent people in good careers. It is crazy how the majority of Americans go through life without knowledge of how our country is run........Now sometimes I think it is better....no worries for them. lol.


2 posted on 02/17/2016 9:18:29 AM PST by napscoordinator
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To: napscoordinator

Low-information-voter alert!!! (Guess which party?)


3 posted on 02/17/2016 9:22:33 AM PST by fwdude
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To: SeekAndFind

Is “Plurality” on the DNC’s “Word of the Day” calendar, or something? Multiple stories, seemingly, misusing the word today.


4 posted on 02/17/2016 9:23:53 AM PST by cincinnati65
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To: napscoordinator

What’s really scary is that the dumbest 10% of those that even bother to vote (50-60% in national elections) are supposedly the ones that decide elections. The so-called swing voters who vote one way and then another, and can’t really articulate why or if they can it’s a stupid reason. That’s why all the campaign money is spent to convince them, because they are swayable.

Freegards


5 posted on 02/17/2016 9:25:17 AM PST by Ransomed
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To: Ransomed

Good point. That is scary for sure. That is why we have had 8 years of terror (not terror attacks) just plain terror in our country.


6 posted on 02/17/2016 9:29:00 AM PST by napscoordinator
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To: SeekAndFind

And those people vote no wonder D.C. is in the mess it’s in.


7 posted on 02/17/2016 10:24:56 AM PST by Vaduz (women and children to be impacted the most.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Not surprising. I’d be hard pressed most days with naming all 57 States /s

Can anyone tell me WHY a Civics poll test is ‘illegal’??

The uninformed and/or those that use govt to steal from other Citizens...can vote? In what universe does that make sense??


8 posted on 02/17/2016 10:43:46 AM PST by i_robot73 ("A man chooses. A slave obeys." - Andrew Ryan)
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To: i_robot73

America is toast. Fedzilla has had control of the kids for decades.
Are we really surprised?


9 posted on 02/17/2016 11:05:28 AM PST by bicyclerepair (Ft. Lauderdale FL (zombie land). TERM LIMITS ... TERM LIMITS)
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10 posted on 02/17/2016 11:10:58 AM PST by DoughtyOne (Facing Trump nomination inevitability, folks are now openly trying to help Hillary destroy him.)
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