Arkansas Tech University The Culture Wars & Political Polarization in Perspective



Download 4.38 Mb.
Page14/42
Date18.10.2016
Size4.38 Mb.
#2677
1   ...   10   11   12   13   14   15   16   17   ...   42

reflects polarization for Republicans, Democrats, and Independents. Independents contribute relatively little to the trend in ideological polarization for partisan identifiers, both the Republican Party identifiers and the Democratic Party identifiers have increasingly contributed to ideological polarization (Figure 9.2). The group polarization score for party ID on ideology in 1972 was nearly 1.0 (.947). By 2004, that score would come up just short of four (3.86), a three-fold increase in partisan polarization on ideology. The big jumps occur in 1984 (a half point increase to 1986) and from 1992 to 1994 and 2000 to 2002 (a full point increase). All during the “culture wars” period and evidencing significant mass polarization. Figure 9.1 illustrates the significant increase in partisan polarization on the ideological dimension over the course of the time series.

Through the 1970’s there was a fairly flat trend in partisan polarization. It was largest in 1976, in the first post-Watergate presidential election (1.46), but for the most part hovered near a group polarization score of 1.0. In the 1980’s we saw partisan polarization spike in 1982, but for the most part the partisan polarization was only slightly higher in the 1980’s relative to the 1970’s. This all changes in 1988, as partisan polarization on ideology established a new and higher plateau (around 1.5). This would continue until 1992. Between 1992 and 1994, proximate to Clinton’s failed attempt to reform health care and leading into the Republican Revolution, partisan polarization on ideology begins to significantly and substantially increase more than it had at any other point of time since the 1970’s. By 1994, partisan polarization is approaching 3, doubling the partisan polarization on ideology that we witness in the 1970’s. The first decade of the 21st century and the Bush administration is no exception to this trend. Indeed, while there was a small decline in 1998, partisan polarization spiked even more in the 2000’s: peaking near a partisan group polarization score of 4 in 2004. This score is also the maximum polarization score for the time series.



Figure 9.1: Party ID Group Polarization on Ideology over Time, 1972-2004



Figure 9.2: Decomposition of Partisan Group Polarization on Ideology over Time, 1972-2004

Figure 9.2 shows the relative contributions of Republicans, Democrats, and Independents to the group polarization score. Recall, these are weighted scores, so independents have a small and declining contribution to partisan polarization given their size relative to the parties and the fact that independent identifiers have declined since the 1970’s. That said, there is a slight increase in the contribution of independents to polarization despite its decreasing weight, likely due to the increasing distance of Republicans and Democrats from Independents rather than movement on ideology for the Independent identifiers themselves. Interestingly, Democrats have higher group polarization scores than Republicans for most of the series. The three data points where the Democrats spike above the Republicans demonstrate the face validity of the measure of partisan polarization. In 1982, in response to Reagan’s election, Democrats spike from a polarization score of 0.6 to a score just short of 1.3. Democrats again surge ahead of the Republicans on polarization in 1994, likely in response to the Republican Revolution. And finally, Democrats substantially outpace Republicans in polarization in 2004, coincident to the prosecution of the Iraq war.



Table 9.2: Trend Regressions of Party ID Group Polarization on Ideology, 1972-2004

Model:

GP(I) = B0 + B1(year) + e

Trend:

Polarization Y/N



Intercept

(S.E.)


Parameter Estimate

(S.E.)


R2

N

Republican

Identifiers



Y



-73.574

(12.727)



0.037

(0.006)


***

.695

17

Independent Identifiers

Y


-3.943

(1.118)


0.002

(0.000)


***

.465


17


Democrat

Identifiers



Y



-83.667

(13.527)



0.043

(0.007)



***

.723

17

Party ID Group Polarization

Y



-161.185

(24.663)


0.082

(0.012)



***

.745

17

The regression models of the group polarization measures for each partisan identifier category and for party ID as a whole demonstrate the significant across-the-board partisan polarization that has occurred since the 1970’s (Table 9.2).66 Note that while Independent identifiers have significantly contributed to partisan polarization, substantively speaking their impact is negligible, again, given their size relative to the other parties and the fact that the two parties are the greatest contributors to partisan polarization. The polarization of Independents relative to the other parties has only increased by .002 for every year in the time series. Compare that to the Republican increased contribution to group polarization (.037) and that of the Democrats (.043). Both Republican and Democrat identifiers have a much more substantial (and near equal) contribution to the group polarization score on ideology for party ID.

The models for the Republican and Democrats proportionately reduce the error over the mean by over 70 percent in the case of the Democrats and nearly 70 percent for the Republicans. Clearly this is strong evidence that the partisan identifiers in the mass public have polarized. Partisan polarization on ideology has increased by 0.082 per for every survey year since 1972, Survey year (I.e. the progression of time) explains 74.5% of the variation in partisan polarization. The trend model for Independent identifiers performs poorly in comparison, explaining less than half of the variation in partisan polarization over the time series. And again, most of that is likely attributable to the Republicans moving to the Right and Democrats moving to the Left.



In Tables 9.3 and 9.4 I report the percent contribution to and mean deviation for the weighted and unweighted group polarization for each of the party categories. Recall that the distinction between

Table 9.3: Percent Contribution & Mean Deviation Weighted Partisan G.P. on Ideology, 1972-2004

YEAR

REP

R-DEV

IND

I-DEV

DEM

D-DEV

1972

41.08%

-1.42%

6.08%

0.75%

52.84%

0.67%

1974

43.60%

1.10%

7.26%

1.94%

49.13%

-3.04%

1976

43.38%

0.88%

7.01%

1.68%

49.61%

-2.56%

1978

44.68%

2.18%

8.89%

3.56%

46.43%

-5.74%

1980

35.36%

-7.14%

5.71%

0.39%

58.92%

6.75%

1982

32.84%

-9.66%

4.83%

-0.50%

62.33%

10.16%

1984

49.91%

7.41%

5.38%

0.05%

44.71%

-7.46%

1986

40.15%

-2.35%

5.10%

-0.23%

54.75%

2.58%

1988

50.60%

8.10%

5.05%

-0.28%

44.35%

-7.82%

1990

34.10%

-8.40%

4.73%

-0.60%

61.17%

9.00%

1992

47.81%

5.31%

5.74%

0.41%

46.44%

-5.73%

1994

41.16%

-1.34%

4.43%

-0.90%

54.41%

2.24%

1996

46.21%

3.71%

3.92%

-1.40%

49.86%

-2.31%

1998

39.65%

-2.85%

4.31%

-1.02%

56.04%

3.87%

2000

39.54%

-2.96%

5.00%

-0.33%

55.46%

3.29%

2002

50.43%

7.93%

2.94%

-2.39%

46.63%

-5.54%

2004

41.99%

-0.51%

4.20%

-1.13%

53.81%

1.64%

Table 9.4: Percent Contribution & Mean Deviation Unweighted Partisan G.P. on Ideology, 1972-2004

YEAR

REP

R-DEV

IND

I-DEV

DEM

D-DEV

1972

44.86%

1.38%

17.14%

-0.49%

38.00%

-0.89%

1974

47.61%

4.13%

18.75%

1.11%

33.64%

-5.24%

1976

46.76%

3.28%

18.07%

0.43%

35.17%

-3.71%

1978

49.48%

6.01%

21.68%

4.05%

28.83%

-10.05%

1980

40.77%

-2.70%

16.70%

-0.94%

42.53%

3.64%

1982

39.69%

-3.78%

16.81%

-0.83%

43.49%

4.61%

1984

47.01%

3.53%

18.24%

0.61%

34.75%

-4.14%

1986

42.35%

-1.12%

16.69%

-0.95%

40.96%

2.08%

1988

46.56%

3.08%

17.94%

0.30%

35.50%

-3.38%

1990

36.39%

-7.08%

17.61%

-0.02%

45.99%

7.10%

1992

47.10%

3.62%

18.31%

0.68%

34.59%

-4.30%

1994

37.92%

-5.56%

17.16%

-0.47%

44.92%

6.03%

1996

46.07%

2.59%

17.65%

0.02%

36.28%

-2.61%

1998

41.54%

-1.93%

16.67%

-0.97%

41.79%

2.90%

2000

40.13%

-3.35%

16.76%

-0.88%

43.11%

4.23%

2002

44.20%

0.72%

16.96%

-0.68%

38.85%

-0.04%

2004

40.63%

-2.84%

16.71%

-0.93%

42.66%

3.77%

the two types of group polarization is that the weighted group polarization weights the group ideology differences by the size of the group (percentage of party identifiers for that category in the sample) while the unweighted table reports percentage contribution to a group polarization measure that treats each group equally, irrespective of size. Note that the Republican and Democratic Parties account for almost all of the percent contribution to group polarization. The maximum contribution for the Independent respondents is 8.89% in 1978, and the percentage contribution declines consistently as we move forward to the end of the time series. The minimum contribution for Independents is 2.94%, in 2002. The impact of the size of the group of Independents for the weighted measure of partisan polarization on ideology is apparent in comparing the percent contributions for Independents in Table 9.3 and the percent contributions for Independents in Table 9.4. The percent contribution to the unweighted measure for Independents varies between 16% and 22%. Furthermore, there is no apparent linear trend in the contribution of Independents in the unweighted measure, suggesting the trend observed in Table 9.3. is mostly due to the declining number of Independent identifiers since 1972.

While the Republican and Democratic percent contributions are clearly affected by their relative group sizes in the weighted measure, it is not nearly as dramatic as the effect on Independent contributions. For the most part there is ordinal consistency between the weighted and unweighted contributions for the identifiers with the two political parties, but there are differences, suggesting the size of the group has an influence on contribution. For example, the largest contribution of the Republican identifiers to weighted partisan polarization on ideology is in 1988 (50.68%), but it is just the second largest contributor to unweighted group polarization (46.56%). The implication is that not only were Republican identifiers more distant from the other party identifiers in 1988, but there were more Republican identifiers in 1988 resulting in a greater contribution to the weighted group polarization measure.



Figure 9.3: Unweighted Mean Deviation Trends in Average Ideology for Partisan Identifiers

If we look at the weighted group polarization in Table 9.3, we see that there are rather significant oscillations in percent contribution between the Republican and Democratic Parties. For example, in 1982 Republicans account for only 32.84% of the group polarization score, which is 9.66% below the mean contribution for Republicans in the time series. But in 1984, in the next survey year, that contribution climbs to 49.91%, which is 7.41% above the mean contribution to partisan polarization. There is a similar trend with the Democrats. In 1982, the Democrats account for 62.33% of partisan polarization on ideology, coming in at 10.16% above the mean contribution. In 1984, that drops to 44.71%, below the mean contribution. While relative size plays some role in this oscillation, the oscillations are still apparent in the unweighted group polarization contribution table. If you look at Figure 9.3, you can see the up and down nature of the percent contributions for Republican and Democratic identifiers in the unweighted group polarization score. However, there does appear to be some patterns in the contributions. Democrats were well below the mean through most of the 1970’s, and they were well above the mean for most of the 2000’s. Conversely, Republicans were big


Download 4.38 Mb.

Share with your friends:
1   ...   10   11   12   13   14   15   16   17   ...   42




The database is protected by copyright ©ininet.org 2024
send message

    Main page