Arkansas Tech University The Culture Wars & Political Polarization in Perspective



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CONCLUSION

This analysis finds significant ideological polarization in the mass public, significant ideological polarization among party elites and party identifiers, a growing divide between party identifiers in the mass public, and a strong linear trend in partisan and ideological polarization over time. Furthermore, there is evidence that political elites are responsive to perturbations in mass ideological beliefs and there is strong evidence of a recursive relationship between the ideology of party identifiers and that of party elites.

The story Fiorina gives us where elites polarize irrespective of mass public attitudes simply doesn’t hold water. It doesn’t make sense in a world where electorates are rational and responsive, as a unilateral shift to the poles of the electoral distribution would lead to Downsian party marginalization. And indeed, we find evidence that legislators are cognizant of the fact they must face the voters and are knowledgeable of the fact that those voters have become more ideologically polarized. Rationalizations offered to explain elite non-responsiveness, such as Fiorina’s theory that elites anticipate ideological challenges from the poles in primaries, fundamentally detach the elected official from his or her interest in re-election (as opposed to standing for election, or receiving interest group benefits, or rewarding partisans, etc.). The argument does not merely suffer from theoretical problems, but also an unresponsive electorate is incongruent with apparent aggregate rationality in terms of short-term effects on elections, increasing homogenization of districts tracking with increased elite polarization, and the effectiveness of political advertising campaigns. The evidence suggests that voters are paying attention to some signals from the political environment and that they hold officials accountable in elections. And while district polarization may account for polarization in the House, it does not explain polarization among candidates for offices with constituencies at higher levels of aggregation.

I find that partisan elite polarization is recursively related to partisan mass polarization. While it is certainly true that elites attempt to influence the mass public through the framing and emphasis of certain issues, it is just as true that elites strive to detect those issues which have become salient to their partisan constituents and shape their position-taking accordingly. Scholars examining the factors of polarization in American politics miss half of the story when ignoring the influence that shifts in the mass electorate have on elite behavior. Electorates change, they change in comprehensible ways, the issues and opinions of aggregate electorates shift sometimes independent of elite preferences, and these shifts produce shifts in electoral behavior. As a result, the optimum ideological disposition for a Republican or Democratic party elite has changed over time. And that shift has been decidedly towards the poles and not the center.


Appendix A: States by Presidential Voting, Median Household Income, & Gross State Product

STATE

BLUE/RED*

MHI (median income)

GSP (per million)







GSP (per capita)




Alabama

RED

$40,554

$165,796







$29,697




Alaska

RED

64,333

44,517







43,748




Arizona

RED

49,889

247,028







33,441




Arkansas

RED

38,134

95,371







27,875




California

BLUE

59,948

1,812,968







41,663




Colorado

RED

55,212

236,324







41,798




Connecticut

BLUE

65,967

216,266







50,332




Delaware

BLUE

54,610

60,118







59,288




Florida

RED

47,804

734,519







33,718




Georgia

RED

49,136

396,504







35,362




Hawaii

BLUE

63,746

61,532







38,083




Idaho

RED

46,253

51,149







30,896




Illinois

BLUE

54,124

609,570







39,514




Indiana

RED

47,448

246,439







34,058




Iowa

BLUE

47,448

129,026







35,662




Kansas

RED

47,451

117,305







34,242




Kentucky

SWING

40,267

154,184







29,842




Louisiana

SWING

40,926

261,146







32,923




Maine

BLUE

45,888

48,108







30,305




Maryland

BLUE

68,080

268,685







39,161




Massachusetts

BLUE

62,365

351,514







46,721




Michigan

BLUE

47,950

381,963







33,468




Minnesota

BLUE

55,082

254,970







41,295




Mississippi

RED

36,338

88,546







24,062




Missouri

SWING

45,114

229,470







33,468




Montana

RED

43,531

34,253







27,942




Nebraska

RED

47,085

80,093







36,441




Nevada

SWING

55,062

127,213







39,813




New Hampshire

BLUE

62,369

57,341







37,666




New Jersey

BLUE

67,035

465,484







44,885




New Mexico

BLUE

41,452

76,178







31,986




New York

BLUE

53,514

1,103,024







46,617




North Carolina

RED

44,670

399,446







36,489




North Dakota

RED

43,753

26,385







34,446




Ohio

SWING

46,597

466,309







34,609




Oklahoma

RED

41,567

139,323







29,545




Oregon

BLUE

48,730

158,223







37,633




Pennsylvania

BLUE

48,576

531,110







34,828




Rhode Island

BLUE

53,514

46,900







36,292




South Carolina

RED

43,329

152,830







29,642




South Dakota

RED

43,424

33,934







35,842




Tennessee

RED

42,367

243,869







34,321




Texas

RED

47,548

1,141,965







36,920




Utah

RED

55,109

105,658







32,357




Vermont

BLUE

49,907

24,543







34,472




Virginia

RED

59,562

382,964







41,702




Washington

BLUE

55,591

311,270







39,616




West Virginia

SWING

37,060

57,711







24,748




Wisconsin

BLUE

50,578

232,293







35,390




Wyoming

RED

51,731

31,514







39,130




*Blue / Red = 3 out of 4 elections (1992,1996,2000,2004) for either party. Swing = 2 out of 4.

*MHI reported in Table 1.1 is for 2007.



* GSP reported in Table 1.1 is calculated over a three year period 2004-2006.

APPENDIX B: GGRD - Frequency Table of Polls on Gays and Gay Rights 1971-2007

POLLS & SURVEYS

FREQ

PER

CUM FREQ

CUM PER

1996 Survey of American Political Culture

4

0.58

4

0.58

2005 National Hispanic Survey

1

0.15

5

0.73

ABC News / Facebook Poll

1

0.15

6

0.87

ABC News / Washington Post Poll

26

3.77

32

4.64

ABC News Poll

11

1.6

43

6.24

Active Center Holds Survey

1

0.15

44

6.39

Adoption Survey

1

0.15

45

6.53

America's Evangelicals

1

0.15

46

6.68

American Public Opinion About Privacy At Home and At Work

10

1.45

56

8.13

American Values in the 80's

1

0.15

57

8.27

Associated Press / IPSOS-Public Affairs Poll

1

0.15

58

8.42

Associated Press / Media General Poll

1

0.15

59

8.56

Associated Press Poll

8

1.16

67

9.72

Attitudes Toward Smoking and the Tobacco Industry Survey

1

0.15

68

9.87

Barna Report 1993-1994 Absolute Confusion

2

0.29

70

10.16

Barna Report 1994-1995 Virtual America

1

0.15

71

10.3

CBS / New York Times Poll

3

0.44

74

10.74

CBS News / NY Times Poll

39

5.66

113

16.4

CBS News Exit Poll

1

0.15

114

16.55

CBS News Poll

8

1.16

122

17.71

CNN / Opinion Research Corporation Poll

4

0.58

126

18.29

Consumers in the Information Age

1

0.15

127

18.43

Defense of Marriage Act Poll

3

0.44

130

18.87

Democracy Corps Survey

39

5.66

169

24.53

Evangelical Christianity in the U.S.

1

0.15

170

24.67

Fair Juror Survey

1

0.15

171

24.82

Family Circle Ethics Poll

1

0.15

172

24.96

Family Research Council Survey

1

0.15

173

25.11

For Goodness Sake Survey

1

0.15

174

25.25

Fox News / Opinion Dynamics Poll

12

1.74

186

27

Free Expression and the American Public

2

0.29

188

27.29

GSS

1

0.15

189

27.43

Gallup / CNN / USA Today Poll

38

5.52

227

32.95

Gallup / CNN Poll

1

0.15

228

33.09

Gallup / Newsweek Poll

12

1.74

240

34.83

Gallup / USA Today Poll

3

0.44

243

35.27

Gallup Poll

62

9

305

44.27

Gallup Report

8

1.16

313

45.43

Gallup/PDK Poll of Public Attitudes Toward the Public Schools

3

0.44

316

45.86

Garth Analysis Survey

1

0.15

317

46.01

General Social Survey

2

0.29

319

46.3

Gordon Black / USA Today Poll

1

0.15

320

46.44

Great American TV Poll

5

0.73

325

47.17

Harris Poll

4

0.58

329

47.75

Harris Survey

14

2.03

343

49.78

If Women Ran America

2

0.29

345

50.07

Judical Confirmation Survey

2

0.29

347

50.36

Kaiser Family Foundation Survey on Americans and AIDS/HIV

1

0.15

348

50.51

Los Angeles Times Poll

53

7.69

401

58.2

NBC News / Wall Street Journal Poll

29

4.21

430

62.41

NPR Poll

3

0.44

433

62.84

National Family Values

2

0.29

435

63.13

New Democratic Electorate Survey

3

0.44

438

63.57

New Models National Brand Poll

3

0.44

441

64.01

PSRA / Newsweek Poll

74

10.74

515

74.75

Parents Magazine Poll

1

0.15

516

74.89

Peole, The Press & Politics Poll - New Political Landscape

1

0.15

517

75.04

People & The Press -- Mood of America Survey

1

0.15

518

75.18

People, The Press & Politics Poll

2

0.29

520

75.47

Pew Internet & American Life Project Poll

2

0.29

522

75.76

Pew News Interest Index / Believability Poll

1

0.15

523

75.91

Pew News Interest Index Poll

7

1.02

530

76.92

Pew News Interest Index Poll / Homosexuality Poll

6

0.87

536

77.79

Pew Research Center Political Survey

1

0.15

537

77.94

Pew Research Center for TP&TP Political Typology Poll

1

0.15

538

78.08

Pew Research Center for TP&TP State of the Union Poll

1

0.15

539

78.23

Pew Research Center for TP&TP Typology Poll

1

0.15

540

78.37

Pew Social Trends Poll

1

0.15

541

78.52

Quinnipac University Poll

3

0.44

544

78.96

Reader's Digest Poll

1

0.15

545

79.1

Religion and Public Life

1

0.15

546

79.25

Roper / Ladies' Home Journal Poll

1

0.15

547

79.39

Roper / U.S. News & World Report Poll

1

0.15

548

79.54

Roper Commerical Survey

1

0.15

549

79.68

Roper Report 77-7

2

0.29

551

79.97

Roper Report 85-7

1

0.15

552

80.12

Roper Report 86-10

1

0.15

553

80.26

Roper Report 87-2

2

0.29

555

80.55

Roper Report 87-7

1

0.15

556

80.7

Roper/U.S. News & World Report Poll

2

0.29

558

80.99

TIPP / Investor's Business Daily / Christian Science Monitor Poll

4

0.58

562

81.57

TV Poll

1

0.15

563

81.71

Taking America's Pulse III - Intergroup Relations Survey

3

0.44

566

82.15

Tarrance Group Poll

2

0.29

568

82.44

The Civic and Political Health of the Nation Survey

1

0.15

569

82.58

Time / CNN / Harris Interactive Poll

8

1.16

577

83.74

Time / CNN / Yankelovich, Clancy & Shulman Poll

40

5.81

617

89.55

Time / SRBI Poll

5

0.73

622

90.28

Time / Yankelovich, Skelly & White Poll

4

0.58

626

90.86

Times Mirror News Interest Index

1

0.15

627

91

U.S. News & World Report / Bozell Worldwide Poll

1

0.15

628

91.15

U.S. News & World Report Poll

15

2.18

643

93.32

Views on Issues and Policies Related to Sexual Orientation Survey

25

3.63

668

96.95

Virginia Slims American Women's Poll

3

0.44

671

97.39

Voice of Mom Survey

2

0.29

673

97.68

Voter Attitudes on Political Campaigns Survey

1

0.15

674

97.82

Washington Post / Harvard / KFF American Values Survey

1

0.15

675

97.97

Washington Post / Harvard / KFF Race Relations Poll

2

0.29

677

98.26

Washington Post / KFF / Harvard Americans on Values

4

0.58

681

98.84

Washington Post / KFF / Harvard Political Independents Survey

1

0.15

682

98.98

Washington Post Poll

5

0.73

687

99.71

What Americans Expect from the Public Schools Survey

1

0.15

688

99.85

Women on Their Own in Unmarried America Survey

1

0.15

689

100


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