Jim Henson, PhD

Jim Henson directs the Texas Politics project and teaches in the Department of Government at The University of Texas, where he also received a doctorate. He helped design public interest multimedia for the Benton Foundation in Washington, D.C., in the late 1990s and has written about politics in general-interest and academic publications. He also serves as associate director of the College of Liberal Arts Instructional Technology Services unit at UT, where he has helped produce several award-winning instructional media projects. In 2008, he and Daron Shaw, a fellow UT government professor, established the first statewide, publicly available internet survey of public opinion in Texas using matched random sampling. He lives in Austin, where he also serves as a member of the City of Austin Ethics Review Commission.     

Race and Attitudes Toward the Police in Texas

June 8, 2015
By: 
Jim Henson, PhD
Joshua Blank, PhD

Last week's incident in McKinney, TX involving a local police officer and a group of black teens has fed the ongoing national conversation about policing and race – a difficult topic made all the more challenging by the multiple dimensions involved in this instance, which include race, class, and views of law enforcement, to name just a few of the big ones.

Presidential Candidate Google Search Tracker

June 6, 2015
By: 
Joshua Blank, PhD
Jim Henson, PhD

With the 2016 GOP Presidential Primary likely to pit at least four candidates with Texas roots against one another (Rick Perry, Ted Cruz, Jeb Bush, and Rand Paul), we've using Google Trends data on each of these candidates to provide a proximate measure of how much attention the candidates are getting via Google searches. In a sense, this data highlights who is receiving the most interest from the public at a given point in time during the campaign. The graphics are dynamically updated to display data from today along with the previous 12-months. 

Who Really Wants Tax Relief — and Why

May 20, 2015
By: 
Jim Henson, PhD
Joshua Blank, PhD

Headlines and rhetoric out of the Texas Legislature this year suggest that the public is clamoring for tax relief. But the polling says otherwise.

Some Rick Perry Poll Numbers in Advance of his June 4 Announcement

May 15, 2015
By: 
Jim Henson, PhD

For those assessing a Rick Perry presidential candidacy in the wake of his announcement of his announcement plans, here are some highlights of attitudes in Texas toward Perry and the 2016 GOP presidential nomination context.

The Texas GOP's One-Armed Hug of HB 4105 and the Politics of Fighting Gay Marriage

May 15, 2015
By: 
Jim Henson, PhD
Joshua Blank, PhD

Public opinion trends in Texas leading up to the defeat of HB 4105 make it seem likely that last night was probably the Texas Legislature's last substantial effort to ban same sex marriage rights with any hope of succeeding.  

Public Opinion and Abortion "Harmony" in Texas and the U.S.

May 6, 2015
By: 
Jim Henson, PhD
Joshua Blank, PhD

In a piece in The New York Times' Upshot blog, Lynn Vavreck, a political scientist at U.C.L.A., notes a surprising degree of 'harmony' amongst the public when it comes to abortion attitudes. Attitudes in Texas largely reflect the attitudes Vavreck finds in the national data, though Texas attitudes evidence  a higher degree of polarization between Democrats and Republicans on the issue.

Public Opinion and Governor Abbott's Choices on Operation Jade Helm 15

April 29, 2015
By: 
Jim Henson, PhD

On April 28, Governor Greg Abbott sent a widely publicized letter to the Commander of the Texas State Guard directing the force to monitor the US military training exercises to take place partially in Texas because "it is important that Texans know their safety, constitutional rights, private property rights and civil liberties will not be infringed," presumably by the training operation, dubbed Operation Jade Helm 15. The governor's hailing of the members of the US military even as he registers concern about potential threats to Texans rights and liberties seems to be waving toward two sets of attitudes among his conservative base that were evident in the most recent UT/Texas Tribune Poll. 

Governor Abbott's Slow Play in the Tax Debate, by the Numbers

April 22, 2015
By: 
Jim Henson, PhD
Joshua Blank, PhD

Governor Abbott’s response to the competing tax proposals emerging from the two chambers of the Texas Legislature last week set off the predictable flurry of speculation in Capitol circles and among the Texas political press.

Five Things Worth Knowing in the Open Carry Debate

April 17, 2015
By: 
Jim Henson, PhD
Joshua Blank, PhD

With open carry legislation still working its way through the legislative process, here’s another brief look at data on gun attitudes from the University of Texas/Texas Tribune Poll, and a consideration of the logic applied to data (or the lack thereof) on gun ownership in the current debate.

What a Tax Fight Says about Texas' Future

April 14, 2015
By: 
Jim Henson, PhD
Joshua Blank, PhD

How Texas lawmakers will cut taxes has emerged as the defining fight of this year's legislative session, highlighting the tension between the state's political culture and its rapid economic growth.

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