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3 - “Hope and Change” Meets “Make America Great Again”

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 September 2024

Matt Grossmann
Affiliation:
Michigan State University
David A. Hopkins
Affiliation:
Boston College, Massachusetts
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Summary

The biggest change in the party coalitions since the 1980s has been the movement of high-education whites into the Democratic Party and the defection of low-education whites to the GOP. Drawing on evidence from opinion surveys, election returns, and demographic data, Chapter 3 documents the parties’ changing voters and geographic constituencies. These trends continued in the 2020 election despite Democratic efforts to reverse the party’s declining popularity among noncollege whites, with some signs educational divides will spread to other racial and ethnic groups. Candidates, activists, political appointees and staffers, judges, party leaders, and campaign workers all demonstrate the same increasing divisions as rank-and-file voters. Democrats may suffer electorally because the Electoral College and apportionment of the Senate grants noncollege whites disproportionate voting power, but college-educated citizens punch above their weight in other forms of influence: as thought leaders, interest group activists, educators, media figures, scientific experts, candidates, political professionals, lawyers, and financial donors.

Type
Chapter
Information
Polarized by Degrees
How the Diploma Divide and the Culture War Transformed American Politics
, pp. 76 - 120
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2024

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