SALT LAKE CITY, March 28, 2018 /PRNewswire/ -- The results
of a national poll released today provide new insights into
Americans' views on honesty and the Ten Commandments, and how
people regard the "little white lies" we tell each other in our
everyday lives. The survey also found that Republicans are more
likely than Democrats to say they would vote for a presidential
candidate who lies, but not more likely to vote for a gubernatorial
candidate who lies. The percentage of Republicans who say they
would support a presidential candidate they agree with even if the
candidate seems "willing to lie to cover up the truth" has grown
from 12 percent to 55 percent since a Fox News poll asked the same
question in 2015.
The nationally representative, online poll is part of the fifth
annual Deseret News Ten Today project. It was conducted
March 10-13, 2018, by YouGov and
designed by Y2 Analytics to study
Americans' views on honesty and on the Ten Commandments more
broadly.
"It is revealing that Americans are more accepting of certain
lies than they once were, especially as social media makes it
easier for people to mislead others, whether to do harm or simply
make themselves look good," said Allison
Pond, editor of the Deseret News In-depth team and a former
Pew Research Center staffer. "With Easter and Passover approaching,
we wanted to examine how Americans viewed the Ten Commandments
today and, in particular, how they felt about lying."
Some of the findings of the poll — which drew 1,000 responses
from Americans across racial, religious, gender and age groups —
include:
Lying
- More Americans see calling in sick to work, exaggerating the
facts of a story or inflating one's resume as acceptable than in
2006. The vast majority of respondents (87%) say lying about an
affair is never okay, and over 70 percent do not accept cheating on
taxes, parents lying to protect kids' grades, or appearing younger
in a dating profile.
- Men and women do not think alike when it comes to matters of
lying. Men are more likely to be okay with cheating on taxes,
inflating the details of a resume, lying to a child's teacher and
lying to a spouse about an affair.
- Evangelical Protestants and Mormons are most likely to say
lying is never okay; Catholics generally fall near the U.S. average
and religious "nones" are most okay with lying, especially about
calling in sick to work, inflating a resume, or lying to child
about a parent's past misbehavior.
Elections
- Overall, Americans say they would not support a 2020
presidential candidate with whom they agree on policy but who
"would lie to cover up the truth." However, real partisan
differences exist, with a majority of Republicans (55%) saying they
would still support a dishonest presidential candidate but a large
majority of Democrats (70%) saying it "would be a deal
breaker."
- When it comes to voting for a gubernatorial candidate who lies,
however, there is no difference between Republicans and Democrats.
Overall, 36 percent of Americans say they still would vote for the
presidential candidate, but only 29 percent say they would for the
candidate for governor.
-
The overall number of voters who say they would support a
presidential candidate they agree with even if the candidate seems
willing to lie to cover up the truth has grown from 21 percent to
36 percent since 2015, an increase that has taken place entirely
among Republicans (12 percent to 55 percent) and Independents (16
percent to 27 percent).
The Ten Commandments
- At least half of Americans think it is still important to live
each of the Ten Commandments, while in the UK (according to a poll
by YouGov last year), only six of the ten are seen as still
important. Belonging to a religion, no matter the tradition, is
correlated with the idea that obedience to the Ten Commandments,
including basic honesty, is still important today.
- Women are more likely than men to say that each of the
commandments are still important; the biggest gaps between men and
women on the commandments are to not covet others' possessions and
not commit adultery.
- The Silent Generation consistently thinks the commandments are
important to live by more than any other generation; millennials
place the least importance on the commandments.
More results from the poll can be found at
deseretnews.com/tentoday, along with a copy of the full report for
download.
The Deseret News is also releasing a content series exploring
the study's implications in depth. The articles include:
- What do Americans think counts as dishonesty? Reactions to nine
hypothetical situations
- Politics, honesty and tribalism in Trump's America
- The split between Americans and Brits — and young and old
Americans — on whether Ten Commandments should be kept today
The annual Ten Today project looks at the relevance of the Ten
Commandments in modern life. Last year's poll explored adultery and
what constitutes cheating in the digital age. This year's survey
was created to contribute new research to conversations about
honesty in public life and in Americans' own lives.
The poll was designed by Doug
Wilks, Editor of the Deseret News; Allison Pond, Senior Editor, In-Depth and
Special Projects and a former Pew Research Center staffer; and
Scott Riding and Quin Monson of
Y2 Analytics, a research
consultancy.
METHODOLOGY
YouGov interviewed 1,523 respondents, who were then matched down
to a sample of 1,250 to produce the final dataset of 1,000 general
population interviews plus 250 interviews of Mormons. The general
population respondents were matched to a sampling frame on gender,
age, race and education. The frame was constructed by stratified
sampling from the full 2016 American Community Survey (ACS) 1-year
sample with selection within strata by weighted sampling with
replacements (using the person weights on the public use file). The
matched general population cases were weighted to the sampling
frame using propensity scores. The matched cases and the frame were
combined and a logistic regression was estimated for inclusion in
the frame. The propensity score function included age, gender,
race/ethnicity, years of education and region. The propensity
scores were grouped into deciles of the estimated propensity score
in the frame and post-stratified according to these deciles. The
weights were then post-stratified on 2016 Presidential vote choice
and a four-way stratification of gender, age (4-categories), race
(4-categories) and education (4-categories) to produce the final
general population weight.
The Mormon sample was matched and weighted to a sampling frame
of Mormon adults constructed from the 2010 American Community
Survey (ACS) sample. Data on interest in politics, party
identification and religion were then matched to this frame from
the 2007 Pew Religious Life Survey. The propensity score function
included age, gender, race/ethnicity, years of education, ideology
and region. The weights were then post-stratified on a four-way
stratification of gender, age (4-categories), race (4-categories)
and education (4-categories) to produce the final Mormon sample
weight.
ABOUT THE DESERET
NEWS
Founded in 1850, the Deseret News (deseretnews.com) offers news,
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country. The award-winning writers at the Deseret News keep their
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