A political analyst was curious if younger adults were becoming more conservative. He decided to see if the mean age of registered Republicans was lower than that of registered Democrats. He selected a simple random sample of 128 registered Republicans from a list of registered Republicans and determined the mean age to be = 39 years with a standard deviation of s1 = 8 years. He also selected an independent simple random sample of 200 registered Democrats from a list of registered Democrats and determined the mean age to be = 40 years with a standard deviation of s2 = 10 years. Let μ1 and μ2 represent the mean ages of the populations of all registered Republicans and Democrats, respectively. Let σ1 and σ2 be the corresponding population standard deviations. Suppose it is reasonable to assume that the distributions of age in the populations of registered Republicans and of registered Democrats are Normal with the same standard deviation. Suppose the political analyst had wished to test the hypotheses H0: μ1 = μ2 versus H1: μ1 < μ2. What can we say about the value of the P-value? Group of answer choices: P-value > 0.10 0.05 < P-value < 0.10 P-value < 0.01 0.025 < P-value < 0.05