ABC News/Washington Post Monthly Poll, May 2008 (ICPSR 24607)
ABC News/Washington Post Poll #1, December 2007 (ICPSR 24593)
ABC News/Washington Post Poll, April 2008 (ICPSR 24606)
ABC News/Washington Post Poll, February 2007 (ICPSR 24584)
ABC News/Washington Post Poll, February 2008 (ICPSR 24605)
ABC News/Washington Post Poll, January 2008 (ICPSR 24603)
ABC News/Washington Post Poll, July 2007 (ICPSR 24589)
ABC News/Washington Post Poll, June 2008 (ICPSR 24608)
ABC News/Washington Post Poll, May 2007 (ICPSR 24588)
ABC News/Washington Post Pre-Super Tuesday Poll, January 2008 (ICPSR 24604)
American National Election Studies (ANES) Panel Study, 2008-2009 (ICPSR 29182)
The 2008-2009 ANES Panel Study is a telephone-recruited Internet panel with two cohorts recruited using nearly identical methods. The first cohort was recruited in late 2007 using random-digit-dialing (RDD) methods common to telephone surveys. Prospective respondents were offered $10 per month to complete surveys on the Internet each month for 21 months, from January 2008 through September 2009. Those without a computer and Internet service were offered a free web appliance, MSN TV 2, and free Internet service for the duration of the study. The second cohort was recruited the same way in the summer of 2008 and asked to join the panel beginning in September 2008. The recruitment interview was conducted by telephone in nearly all cases. A small number of respondents completed the recruitment survey on the Internet after failing to complete a telephone interview. Before the first monthly survey, most respondents also completed an online profile survey consisting primarily of demographic questions.
To minimize panel attrition and conditioning effects, only 7 of the 21 monthly surveys are about politics. Other surveys are about a variety of non-political topics. The panelists answered political questions prepared by ANES in January, February, June, September, October, and November 2008. With certainty, the panel answered more political questions in May 2009.
Note that the 2008-2009 ANES Panel Study is entirely separate from the 2008 ANES Time Series study, which was conducted using the traditional ANES method of face-to-face interviews before and after the 2008 election. Although there are a few questions common to both studies, the samples and methods are different. For further details, see the User Guide. Complete documentation is available on the ANES Web site.
American National Election Study, 1988: The Presidential Nomination Process [Super Tuesday] (ICPSR 9093)
ANES 1980 Time Series Study (ICPSR 7763)
ANES 1988 Time Series Study (ICPSR 9196)
ANES 1996 Time Series Study (ICPSR 6896)
ANES 2004 Time Series and Panel Contextual File (ICPSR 4294)
ANES 2004 Time Series Study (ICPSR 4245)
ANES 2008 Time Series Study (ICPSR 25383)
This study is part of the American National Election Study (ANES), a time-series collection of national surveys fielded continuously since 1952. The American National Election Studies are designed to present data on Americans' social backgrounds, enduring political predispositions, social and political values, perceptions and evaluations of groups and candidates, opinions on questions of public policy, and participation in political life. The 2008 ANES data consists of a time series study conducted both before and after the 2008 presidential election in the United States. It entailed both a pre-election interview and a post-election re-interview. A freshly drawn cross section of the electorate was taken, yielding 1,212 cases. Like its predecessors, the 2008 ANES was divided between questions necessary for tracking long-term trends and questions necessary to understand the particular political moment of 2008. The study maintains and extends the ANES time-series 'core' by collecting data on Americans' basic political beliefs, allegiances, and behaviors: aspects of political belief and action so basic to the understanding of politics that they are monitored at every election, no matter the nature of the specific campaign or the broader setting. The study also carried topical and study-specific instrumentation. Questions covering issues prominent in 2008 addressed job outsourcing, private investment of Social Security funds, and President Bush's tax cut. Americans' views on foreign policy, the war on terrorism, and the Iraq War and its consequences were also addressed. In addition, the study carried expanded instrumentation on inflation, immigration, gender politics, and gay and lesbian politics. It also extended the experiment on the measurement of voter turnout that began in 2002. Demographic variables include respondent age, education level, political affiliation, race/ethnicity, marital status, and family composition.
Additional information about the ANES time series collection can be found on the American National Election Study (ANES) Web site.