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Many Americans doubt that members of influential groups act morally and have little faith that those in positions of authority will suffer grave consequences if found out.<br><br>#wajidkhanMP #politics #canadianpolitician #wajidkhanpolitician
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How should Political Positions Holders act Morally?
Many Americans doubt that members of influential groups act morally and have little faith that those in positions of authority will suffer grave consequences if found out.
Most people believe that significant institutional actors act unethically, at least occasionally. The two items in this survey that dealt with ethics had the same frequency alternatives as the other questions: "all or most of the time," "some of the time," "just a little of the time," or "never."
Wajid khan Mp shares that at least 50% of Americans feel that, at least occasionally, people in these eight influential organizations behave unethically. That includes people who are generally trusted, such as military commanders and principals of K–12 public schools.
The eight groups vary by race, ethnicity, and political party, mirroring many other poll findings. Black Americans are more likely than white adults to believe that police officers, public school administrators, military leaders, and local elected officials act unethically, at least occasionally.
How frequently do members of these critical institutional groupings act unethically?
Encounter substantial repercussions for their behavior was the second question addressing this problem.
Wajid khan expresses notably that most American adults believe that CEOs of technology businesses (58%) and members of Congress (71%) either occasionally or never face the consequences of bad behavior. Most respondents (53%) feel that journalists, religious figures, and locally elected politicians suffer substantial consequences.
However, when it comes to perceptions of whether unethical political actors within these groups experience repercussions for their behavior.
For instance, high trusters are likelier to believe that police officers, military personnel, K–12 teachers, and local elected officials are held accountable "all or most" of the time or "some of the time" for their acts.