Partisans Without Constraint: Political Polarization and Trends in American Public Opinion

43 Pages Posted: 3 Sep 2007 Last revised: 21 Feb 2008

See all articles by Delia Baldassarri

Delia Baldassarri

Princeton University - Department of Sociology; Columbia University - Graduate School of Arts and Sciences

Andrew Gelman

Columbia University - Department of Statistics and Department of Political Science

Date Written: January 28, 2008

Abstract

Political polarization is commonly measured using the variation of responses on an individual issue in the population: more variation corresponds to more people on the extremes and fewer in the middle. By this measure, research has shown that - despite many commentators' concerns about increased polarization in recent decades - Americans' attitudes have become no more variable over the past two or three decades. What seems to have changed is the level of partisanship of the electorate.

We define a new measure of political polarization as increased correlations in issue attitudes and we distinguish between issue partisanship - the correlation of issue attitudes with party ID and liberal-conservative ideology - and issue alignment - the correlation between pairs of issues. Using the National Election Studies, we find issue alignment to have increased within and between issue domains, but by only a small amount (approximately 2 percentage points in correlation per decade). Issue partisanship has increased more than twice as fast, thus suggesting that increased partisanship is not due to higher ideological coherence. Rather, it is parties that are more polarized and therefore better at sorting individuals along ideological lines; the change in people's attitudes corresponds more to a re-sorting of party labels among voters than to greater constraint on issue attitudes.

We conclude suggesting that increased issue partisanship, in a context of persistently low issue constraint, might give greater voice to political extremists and single-issue advocates, and amplify dynamics of unequal representation.

Suggested Citation

Baldassarri, Delia and Gelman, Andrew, Partisans Without Constraint: Political Polarization and Trends in American Public Opinion (January 28, 2008). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1010098 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.1010098

Delia Baldassarri

Princeton University - Department of Sociology ( email )

22 Chambers Street
Princeton, NJ 08544-0708
United States

Columbia University - Graduate School of Arts and Sciences ( email )

New York, NY 10027
United States

Andrew Gelman (Contact Author)

Columbia University - Department of Statistics and Department of Political Science ( email )

New York, NY 10027
United States
212-854-4883 (Phone)
212-663-2454 (Fax)

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Downloads
742
Abstract Views
6,556
Rank
63,343
PlumX Metrics