- Wed Jun 08, 2016 7:16 pm
#26292
Hi all-
This question is an example of an easy question, made to look incredibly tricky through the use of language. To break it down the author gives us two premises. A) Tariffs on particular products tend to protect the small percentage of the population that works in industries that makes those products while hurting everyone else. B) Most people oppose such tariffs. The author then gives us the conclusion, C) politicians would be more likely to get reelected if they voted against these tariffs.
Let's leave answer choice (A) aside for now.
(B) Politicians always vote according to what is most likely to get them reelected. This answer choice doesn't affect the reasoning in anyway, it simply asserts that politicians act out the conclusion. <---> (indicating that this neither supports nor contradicts the reasoning)
(C)Politicians should support only general tariffs, since such tariffs would be more widely popular with voters than tariffs on particular products. Again this answer choice doesn't affect the reasoning in any way.
(D) Politicians should never support measures that favor only a small percentage of the population. This one is kinda tricky but there are two keys to crossing this one off, it says that politicians should never support, which is absolute language not used anywhere in the stimulus,rather the stimulus only talks about likelihood of reelection, and it says "that favor" which means helps instead of "favored by" which would mean supported by.
(E) People who would be hurt by tariffs generally know that they would be hurt by them. This one is attractive since in the real world we might assume that people who don't know they are harmful would not vote against them, but in the LSAT world we take what is written in the stimulus as granted, and the stimulus states that most people oppose such tariffs, regardless of what they actually do or do not know about them.
This leaves us with answer choice (A). Supporters of tariffs on particular products are not significantly more likely than opponents to base their vote for a politician on the politician's stand on the this issue. This is saying that the argument relies on the assumption that the small portion of people who support these tariffs are not significantly more likely than those people who oppose such tariffs to base their vote on the tariffs.
Using the assumption negation technique we can see that if supporters of tariffs are significantly more likely than opposers to base their vote on this issue, then there is a greater likelihood of reelection if the politician votes in favor of the tariff.
Here is an example.
We have a politician with 10 constituents. There is a tariff that helps 4 people and hurts 6. The politician voted for the tariff. The four people who are helped by the Tariff vote to reelect the politician based on her support of the Tariff. Two of the people who are hurt by the Tariff were in the military and the politician served on the veterans council so they vote to reelect her. One of the people hurt by the Tariff is a teacher, and the politician has strongly supported the teachers union, so he votes for her. Only three of the people hurt by the Tariff care more about it than the other issues, and therefore vote against the politician. The politician is thereby reelected.
The author's logic rests on the notion that everyone cares equally about this issue, in which case the hypothetical would come out 6-4, against reelection.
I hope this helps clear it up. Let me know if there are any more questions.
-Shannon