As we say goodbye, at least for now, to an all-Iraq all the time media environment and replace it with all-economy all the time, I get to go back to one of my pet hobbyhorses: how little we know about how voters understand the nexus among energy policy, national security, the economy and global warming.
Or, to put it another way: wonks think that this is one interconnected ball of issues, and that talking about one gets you points on another.
The latest Pew poll suggests that the public thinks otherwise. Thanks to Matt Yglesias for posting the relevant chart, even though his post is about something else.
67 percent of Democrats say "protecting the environment" is a top priority, 59 percent say "dealing with energy problems" and 47 percent say "dealing with global warming."
For Republicans, those numbers are 39, 53 and 12, respectively.
Strengthening the nation's economy, in case you wondered, gets 76 percent from both.
There's an interesting problem/warning lurking there on the global warming piece. Have people decided it's hopeless? Or is it not that important? Or do they include it in environment? Or in energy??