Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-l7hp2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T18:09:04.508Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Governor Partisanship Explains the Adoption of Statewide Mask Mandates in Response to COVID-19

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 October 2021

Christopher Adolph*
Affiliation:
Department of Political Science, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA
Kenya Amano
Affiliation:
Department of Political Science, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA
Bree Bang-Jensen
Affiliation:
Department of Political Science, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA
Nancy Fullman
Affiliation:
Department of Health Metrics Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA
Beatrice Magistro
Affiliation:
Schwartz Reisman Institute for Technology and Society, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada
Grace Reinke
Affiliation:
Department of Political Science, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA
John Wilkerson
Affiliation:
Department of Political Science, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA
*
Corresponding author: Christopher Adolph, email: [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Public mask use has emerged as a key tool in response to COVID-19. We develop a classification of statewide mask mandates that reveals variation in their scope and timing. Some US states quickly mandated wearing of face coverings in most public spaces, whereas others issued narrow mandates or no mandate at all. We consider how differences in COVID-19 epidemiological indicators and partisan politics affect when states adopted broad mask mandates, starting with the earliest mandates in April 2020 and continuing through the end of 2020. The most important predictor is the presence of a Republican governor, delaying statewide indoor mask mandates an estimated 98.0 days on average. COVID-19 indicators such as confirmed case or death rates are much less important predictors. This finding highlights a key challenge to public efforts to increase mask wearing, one of the most effective tools for preventing the spread of SARS-CoV-2 while restoring economic activity.

Type
Original Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NCCreative Common License - SA
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the same Creative Commons licence is included and the original work is properly cited. The written permission of Cambridge University Press must be obtained for commercial re-use.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the American Political Science Association

Introduction

Public mask wearing is now widely viewed as a low-cost and effective means for reducing SARS-CoV-2 virus transmission (Chu et al. Reference Chu, Akl, Duda, Solo, Yaacoub and Schünemann2020; Howard et al. Reference Howard, Huang, Li, Tufekci, Zdimal, van der Westhuizen and von Delft2020; Lyu and Wehby Reference Lyu and Wehby2020). However, it was not until April 3, 2020, more than a month after the first reported case of the novel coronavirus in the United States, that the CDC formally recommended mask wearing to the general public (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2020). Across the United States, voluntary adherence to the CDC’s mask recommendation has been uneven. Mask wearing in response to airborne diseases is an established cultural norm in some societies, but this was not the case in the United States (Friedman Reference Friedman2020).

As with other nonpharmaceutical interventions (NPIs), such as business and school closures and stay-at-home directives (Adolph et al. Reference Adolph, Amano, Bang-Jensen, Fullman and Wilkerson2021a), the absence of a national mask mandate has led to considerable mask policy variation across states (Masks4All 2020). Many US states were slow to require citizens to wear masks across a broad range of indoor public spaces statewide, despite the CDC’s recommendation and despite growing evidence that mask wearing is an effective intervention. Only 33 of 50 states had adopted such mask mandates by the time United States’ second wave of COVID-19 began to recede in early August 2020. Furthermore, during the third wave of COVID-19 in the United States, 12 states still lacked mandates by December 31, 2020 (Fullman et al. Reference Fullman, Bang-Jensen, Reinke, Magistro, Castellano, Erickson, Dapper, Walcott, Amano, Wilkerson and Adolph2021).Footnote 1

Political scientists and democratic theorists assume that retrospective voting plays an important role in incentivizing good governance and accountability in democracies (Ashworth Reference Ashworth2012; Fearon Reference Fearon, Przeworski, Stokes and Manin1999; Ferejohn Reference Ferejohn1986; Healy and Malhotra Reference Healy and Malhotra2013; Hopkins and Pettingill Reference Hopkins and Pettingill2018). The logic is that incumbents want to stay in office and fear that voters will throw them out if socioeconomic circumstances worsen during their terms. De Benedictis-Kessner and Warshaw (Reference de Benedictis-Kessner and Warshaw2020a), for instance, uncover evidence of retrospective voting even at the most local levels of government. If wages increase in a given state or county, it is the president’s party that is held responsible, an effect that only grows under conditions of heightened partisanship (de Benedictis-Kessner and Warshaw Reference de Benedictis-Kessner and Warshaw2020b).

By this logic, mandating masks would seem to be smart politics. Mask wearing reduces the risk of virus transmission, allowing people interact more safely among each other, and thus enabling faster and more sustained economic reopening. Indeed, other studies find that the pressures of fiscal federalism and the threat of exit by residents and businesses encourage state, local, and city politicians to pursue policies endorsed by experts rather than their national party bases (Harmes Reference Harmes2019; Oates Reference Oates1999; Peterson Reference Peterson1981).

Other research, however, provides reasons to question whether the conditions for retrospective voting are always present at the state level. The decline of journalism covering state and local politics, increasing polarization at the national level, and voters’ general inattention to down-ballot politics (Anzia Reference Anzia2011; Hopkins Reference Hopkins2018; Rogers Reference Rogers2016) may amplify the power of special interest groups, which likely gives state and local politicians more leeway in pursuing policies at odds with the well-being of residents. But what political incentives might lead state politicians to resist mask mandates? The possibility that special interests stand to lose if states adopt mask wearing policies seems implausible. A more likely explanation is partisan politics.

State politics are becoming increasingly nationalized and thus increasingly polarized along party lines (Shor and McCarty Reference Shor and McCarty2011). Whether party polarization starts with voters, interest groups, or politicians themselves, the effect is greater polarization of state policy outcomes. This is a new development. Historically, studies found minimal partisan differences in state policy (Caughey, Warshaw, and Xu Reference Caughey, Warshaw and Xu2017; Erikson, Wright, and McIver Reference Erikson, Wright and McIver1993; Garand Reference Garand1988; Jacobs and Carmichael Reference Jacobs and Carmichael2002; Konisky Reference Konisky2007). More recently, there is increasing evidence that party control is producing important policy differences across diverse policy areas (Adolph, Breunig, and Koski Reference Ado lph, Breunig and Koski2020; Grumbach Reference Grumbach2018).

At first glance, variation in state mask mandate adoption appears to fall sharply along political party lines. Every one of the 12 states without a broad mask mandate at the end of 2020 was led by a Republican governor, and most of the early adopting states were led by Democratic governors. But it is also possible that first impressions overlook the impact of other differences among states. For example, perhaps some states were slow to adopt or never adopted mask mandates, because they had substantially fewer COVID-19 cases or deaths per capita.

Considering the mounting evidence that masks are an effective means for slowing the spread of SARS-CoV-2, and the rapid real-time policy innovation of mask mandates across states, it is important to uncover the central drivers of these state-level COVID-19 responses. By understanding these decisions, we may be able to better chart the landscape of future policy innovation in response to crisis.

Using originally collected data on mask mandates across states, we examine how variation in COVID-19 epidemiological indicators by state, partisan control of the executive, and other state characteristics may have affected the timing of mask mandate adoption. Specifically, we recorded when states issued, expanded, or rescinded mask mandates and developed a three-point scale to classify the breadth of each mandate. We then performed an event history analysis to explore variation in the timing of adoption of broad mandates that require individuals to wear masks while indoors in public spaces.

Controlling for state citizen ideology and the seven-day moving average of reported COVID-19 deaths per million residents, we find the governor’s party affiliation is the most important predictor of state differences in the timing of indoor public mask mandates. Over the nine-month span from April 1, 2020, to December 31, 2020, the marginal effect of a having Republican governor instead of a Democrat was a 98.0 day delay (95% confidence interval [CI]: 88.8–107.3) in the issuance of broad statewide mask mandates (hazard ratio = 6.83, 95% CI: 2.87–16.26). This impact is far larger than that of any other variable examined and is robust to many different sensitivity analyses testing a large number of possible confounders and alternative measurements.

Why partisan politics is such a strong predictor of state mask mandates is beyond the scope of our analysis. We speculate that it is one more symptom of the nationalization of state-level partisan politics and troubling evidence of the decline of retrospective policy voting. Republican governors feared being held to account by Republican voters, but not because they promoted policies that were detrimental to those voters’ health and economic well-being. Indeed, there is evidence that governors’ lack of action imposed considerable harm (Guy Jr. et al. Reference Guy, Lee, Sunshine, McCord, Howard-Williams, Kompaniyets and Dunphy2021).

Instead, the retrospective voting behavior these governors feared was being held to account for not supporting their partisan team. Opposing mask wearing became a litmus test for Republicans. From the early stages of the pandemic, President Trump mocked mask wearing as evidence of personal weakness, ignoring the role of masks in protecting other people from transmission of SARS-CoV-2 (Kaplan and Thrush Reference Kaplan and Thrush2020). Republican governors therefore perceived that instructing their citizens to behave otherwise was politically perilous, despite the potential for prolonged health and economic costs for their state’s citizens. Although Republican lawmakers no longer risk direct backlash from the Trump administration for pursuing mask policies, antipathy toward masks among Republican party elites and Trump voters remains. Our analysis shows that the effects of the former president’s antimask stance have outlasted his tenure, and could be an enduring hallmark of the Republican platform.

Data

We collected data on all statewide directives mandating masks issued from the start of the US epidemic through December 31, 2020. We consider a public mask mandate to be any policy that requires individuals to wear masks or other mouth and nose coverings when they are outside their places of residence. We include only mandates that apply to all individuals within a given setting, allowing exceptions for individuals with certain medical conditions or for young children. Our data thus do not include mandates that only require the use of masks or other personal protective equipment by employees (but not customers) as part of specific business operations.

To further capture variation across mask mandates applying to the general public, we create a typology with three ordered categories that encompass all statewide public mask mandates issued over this period:

Limited mandate (Level 1)

Policies in this category involve limited mask mandates applying only to specific public settings. For example, mask mandates at this level might apply only to transportation services (e.g., issued by Vermont on May 1, 2020, augmented to a Level 3 policy on July 24, 2020 [State of Vermont 2020a, 2020b]), to retail establishments (e.g., issued by Alaska on April 22, 2020, and ended on May 22, 2020 [State of Alaska 2020]), or to large gatherings where social distancing is not possible (e.g., issued by New Hampshire on August 11, 2020 [State of New Hampshire 2020]). A common example of a limited mandate is one which applies only to people visiting state government buildings (e.g., issued by Utah on June 26, 2020, and by Oklahoma on November 16, 2020 [State of Oklahoma 2020; State of Utah 2020]).

Broad indoor mandate (Level 2)

Policies in this category constitute broad mask mandates requiring the use of masks or cloth face coverings by the public across most or all sectors of public activity indoors or in enclosed spaces. Mandates in this category may also include requirements that members of the public wear masks while waiting in line to enter an indoor space, or while using or waiting for shared transportation. For example, Minnesota’s mask mandate (issued on July 22, 2020) requires people over five years of age who are medically able to wear facial coverings or masks “in an indoor business or public indoor space, including when waiting outdoors to enter an indoor business or public indoor space, and when riding on public transportation, in a taxi, in a ride-sharing vehicle, or in a vehicle that is being used for business purposes” (State of Minnesota 2020).

Broad indoor and outdoor mandate (Level 3)

Policies in this most comprehensive category mandate the use of face coverings by the public across all public indoor spaces and in outdoor settings, although exceptions may be made for outdoor mask wearing where social distancing is possible. For instance, New York issued a mask policy on April 15, 2020, mandating all individuals who are medically able and over two years of age to wear a mask when in a public place and unable to maintain social distancing (State of New York 2020). Washington state’s mask mandate, issued on June 24, 2020, requires that “every person… wear a face covering that covers their nose and mouth when in any indoor or outdoor setting” (State of Washington 2020).

Because Level 1 reflects a very limited mask mandate from the perspective of preventing transmission of SARS-CoV-2, and because the policies within that category vary considerably from one another, we concentrate our analysis on adoption of mandates at Level 2 or Level 3: mandates that at a minimum include a broad requirement to wear masks indoors in public spaces. For these policies, we coded both the dates on which statewide policies were issued in each state at each level, as well as the date of enactment of each policy. Because our objective is to better understand the factors that influenced Governors’ decisions to implement mask mandates, we focus on the dates the policies were issued.

The top panel of Figure 1 shows when broad statewide mandates requiring masks in indoor public spaces (Level 2 or higher mandates) were adopted across the United States, starting in April 2020. The bottom panel shows when the broadest dual indoor–outdoor mandates were adopted (Level 3). These adoptions occurred in three phases: from the middle of April to the end of May 2020, 11 states adopted Level 2 or higher mandates; most (eight states) were Level 3 mandates. The second phase began in mid- to late-June and continued into early August 2020. In this later phase, an additional 22 states adopted mask mandates of at least Level 2 or higher, bringing the total number of states with broad mandates to 33. Most of these (17) were also Level 3 mandates (for a total of 25 Level 3 mandates). Four of these 17 states (Maryland, Michigan, New Jersey, and Oregon) had already adopted Level 2 mandates in April. On September 30, 2020, Mississippi ended its statewide mask mandate, replacing it with county-level mask mandates which were coordinated by the state government.Footnote 2 All other states adopting statewide mandates in the spring or summer maintained them through the end of 2020. The third phase of mask mandates began as US coronavirus cases increased in late fall: in November 2020, governors in North Dakota, Utah, Hawaii, Iowa, and New Hampshire introduced broad, statewide mask mandates, followed by Wyoming in December. In the same month, Virginia raised its mandate from Level 2 to Level 3. Thus, by the end of 2020, more than three-quarters of states, containing at least 78.7% of the US population, had statewide mask mandates requiring masks in indoor settings. Sixty percent of states, containing 69.9% of the population, further required masks to be worn outdoors statewide.Footnote 3

Figure 1. Adoption of broad statewide mask mandates in 2020.

Note. Weeks counted from March 1, 2020, for convenience. States listed as having Level 1 mandates are those which never adopted stronger mandates. Except for Mississippi, all states that introduced Level 2 or Level 3 statewide mask mandates maintained them at least through December 31, 2020. Except for Montana (which issued a Level 3 mandate on January 13, 2021, then repealed its mandate on February 12, 2021), no state adopted a higher statewide mask mandate in the first two months of 2021.

Source. Authors’ original data (Fullman et al. Reference Fullman, Bang-Jensen, Reinke, Magistro, Castellano, Erickson, Dapper, Walcott, Amano, Wilkerson and Adolph2021).

Results

We use Cox proportional hazards models to explore how different factors influenced the timing of broad statewide mask mandates across the 50 US states. These factors include COVID-19 indicators, state capacity, and partisan politics. Figure 2 reports the results from our baseline model, which controls for the log of the seven-day moving average of COVID-19 deaths per million population reported in the state, the ideological orientation of each state’s citizenry, and the party of the governor (Fording Reference Fording2018; The National Conference of State Legislators 2020; The New York Times 2020). These results are reported both using traditional hazard ratios (top panel of Figure 2) and as average marginal effects across all the 50 states, expressed as the average expected days of delay associated with each factor (bottom panel of Figure 2). The Methods Appendix provides further details of estimation and complete tables of results.

Figure 2. Relative probability (a) and expected delay (b) of adopting at least a Level 2 mask mandate, by factor.

Note. The top panel shows on a log scale the estimated hazard ratios obtained from a Cox proportional hazards model on mask mandates adopted by the 50 states, April 1 to December 31, 2020. Red circles mark the hazard ratios for political covariates, and purple circles indicate hazard ratios for other covariates. The bottom panel shows on a linear scale the estimated average marginal effects obtained by post-estimation simulation from the model. The red square marks the combined effect of partisanship and ideology, red circles indicate the independent effects of governor party and citizen ideology, and purple circles indicate average marginal effects for other covariates. Horizontal lines are 95% confidence intervals. Solid symbols indicate significance at the 0.05 level.

By far, the most powerful predictor of broad mask mandate adoption and timing is the political party of the governor. Holding constant state ideology and the daily rate of COVID-19 deaths per million population, at any given time, Democratic governors are 6.83 times more likely (95% CI: 2.87–16.26) to adopt a mask mandate of at least Level 2 than are Republican governors. We also use the estimated Cox model to predict the total expected delay hypothetically associated with having a Republican governor (rather than a Democratic governor) in each state, while leaving state ideology and COVID-19 deaths per million at their observed values for each state-day. We find that averaged across the 50 states, the marginal effect of having a Republican governor is a 98.0 day delay in adopting a broad indoor mask mandate (95% CI: 88.8–107.3 days).

The party of the governor is not the only political variable that influences the likelihood of adoption. Holding constant the party of the governor, states with more liberal citizens adopt mandates earlier than states with more conservative citizens. For example, states at the 75th percentile of citizen ideology (more liberal) are 1.71 times more likely to adopt mask mandates at a given time than more conservative states at the 25th percentile of citizen ideology (95% CI: 1.25–2.33). The marginal effect of this interquartile difference in citizen ideology is a 26.1-day delay of indoor mask mandates in more conservative states (95% CI: 23.9–28.3 days).

Researchers and policy makers use several metrics to track SARS-CoV-2 transmission, and governors had access to daily data on COVID-19 measures including confirmed cases, deaths, and positive test result rates from both internal groups and state agencies. In our model, which uses epidemiological data from The New York Times, daily deaths per million dominates measures of new cases per million and test positivity rates (which we include among our robustness checks) as a factor associated with the timing of broad statewide mask mandates. Nevertheless, the effect of daily deaths is much weaker than the effect of governors’ party affiliation. We find that a state at the 75th percentile for daily COVID-19 deaths per million population is 2.40 times more likely to adopt a mask mandate at a given time than a state at the 25th percentile (95% CI: 1.63–3.55). Our model suggests a state with a persistently lower rate of daily COVID-19 deaths will adopt mask mandates 38.2 days later than a state with a higher daily death rate (95% CI: 33.7–42.6 days).

As Republican governors and conservative citizens often go together, the aggregate impact of politics on mask mandate adoption is even greater. When combined, the expected delay in adopting at least an indoor mask mandate for a state with both a Republican governor and a conservative citizenry is 124.9 days (95% CI: 114.1–135.7 days) when compared to a Democratic governor in a liberal state. The majority of this delay is attributable to the party of the executive, highlighting the importance of state-level political leadership in fighting the virus.

We conducted several additional analyses to test the robustness of these findings. First, we considered the possibility that our results were sensitive to either the source of daily COVID-19 data used in the model or the set of COVID-19 indicators used for each state-day. Our baseline model used data reported by The New York Times on daily COVID-19 deaths for each state (The New York Times 2020). Figure 3 reports results from a series of models that use alternative sources of daily death counts (Center for Systems Science and Engineering, Johns Hopkins University 2020; The COVID Tracking Project 2020). As the top of Figure 3 makes clear, the gap between the effect of governor partisanship and the effect of deaths per million remains at least as large as in the baseline model across the alternative indicators. Alternatively, instead of looking at the average rate of daily deaths, policy makers could be focused on trends.Footnote 4 When added as an additional control to a model that already captures the rate of deaths, the trend in deaths has only a small effect on the risk of adopting a Level 2 or higher mask mandate, and the statistical significance of that effect varies across different data sources. Once again, the effect of partisan governors remains unchanged.

Figure 3. Sensitivity of results to alternative COVID-19 epidemiological indicators.

Note. Estimated hazard ratios of mask mandate adoption (Level 2 or higher) for various epidemiological indicators (in purple) and for Democratic governors (in red) from a series of Cox proportional hazards models adding each epidemiological covariate using data from the source listed at the left of the plot. Horizontal lines are 95% confidence intervals. Solid symbols indicate significance at the 0.05 level; shaded symbols indicate significance at the 0.1 level. Axes are log scaled.

COVID-19 deaths may be the most politically salient consequence of the pandemic, but they are also the least timely indicator of the severity of SARS-CoV-2 transmission in a given place and time, operating at a lag of approximately two or more weeks from the time of infection (Testa et al. Reference Testa, Krieger, Chen and Hanage2020; Wilson et al. Reference Wilson, Kvalsvig, Barnard and Baker2020). We therefore consider models adding controls for more timely indicators of the spread of SARS-CoV-2: the number of confirmed COVID-19 cases per million reported in each state each day and the rate of test positivity (in both cases, as seven-day moving averages). Arguably, states taking prompt action to curb the spread of the virus should be responsive to these indicators. With respect to rates of confirmed cases, results are mixed and depend on the source of data. In a model using death and case data from The New York Times, the effect of higher rates of case growth is in the expected direction of encouraging mask mandates, but not statistically significant in a model that controls for the count of deaths. However, using data from either the COVID Tracking Project or Johns Hopkins University, we find significant relationships between confirmed cases per million population and adopting broad indoor mask mandates. On the other hand, rate of positive tests in a state had no relationship with mandate timing once deaths per million is controlled.Footnote 5 In all models, the partisan effect was unchanged, and considerably larger than the effects of any epidemiological indicators.

Aside from alternative measures of public health indicators, we also consider a series of additional control variables, none of which alter our findings regarding the effect of partisan governors (Figure 4). First, we add a third measure of partisan politics, either Trump’s vote share in the state in the 2016 presidential election (The New York Times Staff 2017) or the percentage of people in the state who watch Fox News regularly (Simply Analytics 2018). Neither helps explain mask mandate timing in models that also control for governor party and citizen ideology. This may indicate that direct effects of these factors cannot be isolated, or that their impact on timing is mediated through governors and through their conservative audiences.

Figure 4. Democratic governors’ greater propensity to enact mask mandates is highly robust.

Note. Estimated hazard ratios of mask mandate adoption (Level 2 or higher) for the effect of Democratic governors from a series of Cox proportional hazards models including various added controls or alternative outcome measures. Horizontal lines are 95% confidence intervals (CIs). Solid symbols indicate significance at the 0.05 level. Arrows indicate CIs that extend outside the plotting range. Axes are log scaled. “Substate mandates” refers to mandates that apply to county-specific mandates coordinated by the state government and does not include local ordinances.

Next, we consider the possibility that states adopt (or fail to adopt) mask mandates either in imitation of policies adopted by other states, in reaction to the spread of the virus in neighboring states, or as an act of free-riding on the mandates of neighbors. We find that controlling for governor party, citizen ideology, and the daily death rate within a state, neither the adoption of mask mandates by neighboring states nor the average death rate in neighboring states is associated with the timing of mandates. We also control for the rate of mask mandate adoption in “peer states”—other states identified using network analysis as the innovators which a given state most often imitates across a variety of policy areas (Desmarais, Harden, and Boehmke Reference Desmarais, Harden and Boehmke2015). Because many peer states do not share a border, diffusion among peers is expected to be driven by patterns of policy imitation, rather than concern for spillovers or free-riding on neighbors’ restrictions. Puzzlingly, the rate at which peer states have adopted mask mandates is negatively associated with mandate adoption once our baseline controls are included. We suspect this result is spurious, and in any case, inclusion of this control does not alter our main findings.

Other controls which fail to explain mandate timing when added to the model include the percentage of state residents above the age of 70 and the percentage of state residents in possession of a college degree (Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation 2017), as well as the log of population density (US Census 2017) and the log of gross state product per capita (US Bureau of Economic Analysis 2020). We consider the latter nonfinding reasonable given the minimal economic consequences of a mask mandate, in contrast to many other NPIs. We consider one last control: the (pre-epidemic) count of ICU beds in each state per capita, which if low might add urgency to state policies to combat the pandemic (Harvard Global Health Institute 2020). However, we find no significant association between pre-epidemic ICU beds and mask mandates, nor does inclusion of this control alter our main findings.

Next, we consider changes to the temporal scope of our analysis. In April and May 2020, states that adopted mask mandates did so either before they eased social distancing mandates, or concurrent with efforts to ease social distancing and reopen business sectors. Despite early ambivalence among medical experts about the effectiveness of masks as a COVID-19 NPI, these states may have issued mask mandates as a preventative policy layer to mitigate transmission risks associated with easing social distancing restrictions (Hendrix et al. Reference Hendrix, Walde, Findley and Trotman2020). Over time, the benefits of wearing nonmedical masks against SARS-CoV-2 transmission were better understood and more widely publicized (Javid and Balaban Reference Javid and Balaban2020; Stutt et al. Reference Stutt, Retkute, Bradley, Gilligan and Colvin2020). Despite partisan resistance to mask mandates on the part of Republican voters and President Trump, one could imagine governors of both parties coalescing in June and July around mask mandates as the least costly intervention to protect fragile state economies and create a path to normal social interactions (Chu et al. Reference Chu, Akl, Duda, Solo, Yaacoub and Schünemann2020; Lyu and Wehby Reference Lyu and Wehby2020).

Yet when we restrict our analysis to a later window of June 1, 2020, to December 31, 2020, we find an even stronger partisan governor effect (a hazard ratio of 11.00, 95% CI: 4.18–28.93) when compared with an earlier (although somewhat overlapping) window capturing just the first and second waves of the epidemic (from April 1, 2020, to August 12, 2020, the hazard ratio was 6.60, 95% CI: 2.69–16.16). These results confirm that the party of the governor was strongly associated with the adoption of mask mandates throughout 2020, rather than a short-lived phenomenon that could be explained by early reluctance to take the virus seriously in an uncertain, low-information environment. Instead, the context of an impending national election, and the sharp increase in partisan messaging that accompanied it, likely played a role in the persistence—and perhaps even intensification—of the partisan divide surrounding mask policies.

We also investigate alternative ways to measure the timing of mask mandates. In the preceding analyses, we considered states at risk of mask mandates starting from a common date (in most analyses, April 1, 2020), by which point the coronavirus had widely spread throughout the United States. An alternative is to “start the clock” for each state on the date the virus first showed up in that state as a confirmed case (or a confirmed death) to allow for the possibility that states that were slow to confirm the presence of the virus were biased against preventative action. Tailoring the set of state-days at risk to include only those days following either the first confirmed case or the first confirmed death in a given state does not change our results. Second, instead of measuring time to the issuance of mask mandates, we model the time to the enactment dates contained in those mandates. This change makes no substantive difference in our results. Third, the governors of three states—Mississippi, Ohio, and Oregon—imposed mask mandates of at least Level 2 for specific counties in advance of adopting statewide mandates.Footnote 6 The preceding models ignore these early, geographically incomplete measures, but even if we assign adoption dates to these three states based on their earliest efforts to coordinate substate mask requirements, we obtain substantively similar results, suggesting our findings on partisan governors are not an artifact of focusing on statewide mandates.

As a final robustness check, we report a complementary analysis modeling the time to adoption of mandates requiring masks both indoors and outdoors (Level 3 mandates), a breadth of mandate only 60% of states adopted by the end of 2020. The results of this analysis are reported in Figure 5 as well as in the Methods Appendix. Overall, we find substantively similar results, with some quantitative differences in effect size. The hazard ratio associated with conservative citizen ideology grew to 2.50 in the model of Level 3 mandates (95% CI: 1.77–3.52) from 1.71 in the more inclusive model of both Level 2 and Level 3 mandates, whereas the hazard ratios associated with the party of the governor and a higher moving average of deaths per million each shrank somewhat. On a given day, adoption of Level 3 mask mandates were 2.39 times more likely under Democratic governors (95% CI: 1.19–4.80), compared to 6.83 times for Level 2+ mandates. Finally, Level 3 mandates were 1.81 times more likely given a higher rate of deaths (95% CI: 1.31–2.50), compared to 2.40 times for Level 2+ mandates. In all cases, these results remained significant at the 0.05 level and associated with substantively noteworthy average marginal effects. States with low death rates could be expected to adopt combined indoor–outdoor mask mandates 28.1 days later than states with high death rates (95% CI: 24.8–31.4). The expected delay associated with Republican governors was 46.1 days (95% CI: 40.6–51.6), whereas states with more conservative citizens could be expected to adopt Level 3 mandates 48.0 days later than states with more liberal citizens (95% CI: 39.0–57.0). The combined delay for states with Republican governors and conservative citizens was 98.3 days (95% CI: 84.7–111.9).

Figure 5. Relative probability (a) and expected delay (b) of adopting a Level 3 mandate for public masks, by factor.

Note. The top panel shows on a log scale the estimated hazard ratios obtained from a Cox proportional hazards model on mask mandates adopted by the 50 states, April 1 to December 31, 2020. Red circles mark the hazard ratios for political covariates, and purple circles indicate hazard ratios for other covariates. The bottom panel shows on a linear scale the estimated average marginal effects obtained by post-estimation simulation from the model. The red square marks the combined effect of partisanship and ideology, red circles indicate the independent effects of governor party and citizen ideology, and purple circles indicate average marginal effects for other covariates. Horizontal lines are 95% confidence intervals. Solid symbols indicate significance at the 0.05 level.

Discussion

Masks are an important, low-cost intervention to slow the spread of SARS-CoV-2 (Javid and Balaban Reference Javid and Balaban2020; Stutt et al. Reference Stutt, Retkute, Bradley, Gilligan and Colvin2020). Near-universal mask wearing reduces the risk implicit in returning to aspects of normal life and may be especially important for protecting essential workers who are not able to limit their exposure through social distancing (Javid and Balaban Reference Javid and Balaban2020; Leatherby Reference Leatherby2020; Stutt et al. Reference Stutt, Retkute, Bradley, Gilligan and Colvin2020).

In some countries, mask wearing is a well-established cultural norm (Friedman Reference Friedman2020). This was not the case in the United States prior to COVID-19. By early summer 2020, governors of both parties surely recognized the pandemic’s continued threat to their states and were also well aware that it was transmitted via aerosols. One might therefore expect these leaders to be eager to encourage mask wearing as an alternative to the steep social and economic costs implicit in prolonged social distancing measures such as stay-at-home orders. The pandemic’s rapid progression also suggests that mandates, rather than public education campaigns, would be the preferred approach to ensuring mask compliance. Why, then, were so many Republican governors reluctant to promote this relatively low-cost and effective intervention?

Our event history analysis cannot pin down exact motives. The most likely explanation, we believe, is that the absence of a mask wearing norm in the United States opened the door to reactionary responses. From the beginning of the pandemic, President Trump seemed more concerned about the pandemic’s threat to the economy than the threat to public health. He and other Republican party elites may have seen mask wearing as a constant public reminder of a problem they were trying to minimize. The President publicly mocked mask wearers and continued to oppose a national mandate even after becoming seriously ill himself (BBC 2020).

However, presidents need support from other party leaders, especially in public health, where the states have the greatest constitutional authority to act. Given the reality of the pandemic, why did the President’s position have so much support among other Republican leaders? The United States is as polarized politically as it has ever been, including across and within state governments (Grumbach Reference Grumbach2020; Masket Reference Masket2009; Shor and McCarty Reference Shor and McCarty2011). A plausible hypothesis is that partisan politics motivated many Republican governors to oppose or delay imposing mask mandates, not because they truly believed masks to be ineffective or unnecessary, but because Trump’s very public rejection of mask wearing influenced the attitudes of a significant fraction of Republican voters (Gallup 2020). In the midst of the epidemic, Republican identifiers were much less likely than Democratic identifiers to say that they wear masks all or most of the time (53% vs. 76% in August 2020; Igielnik Reference Igielnik2020). Republicans were also more likely to resist mask wearing as a sign of weakness or “unmanly” behavior (Capraro and Barcelo Reference Capraro and Barcelo2020; Glick Reference Glick2020; Glick, Berdahl, and Alonso Reference Glick, Berdahl and Alonso2018), perhaps based on the mistaken assumption that self-protection is the primary objective of mask wearing.

In this context, Republican governors who mandated masks risked being portrayed as weak, threatening their base of support and possibly the support of their party’s national leader. Democratic governors, in contrast, had their own political reasons to support mask wearing. These included: a generally positive view of mask wearing among Democratic constituents (Clinton et al. Reference Clinton, Cohen, Lapinski and Trussler2020; Igielnik Reference Igielnik2020; Katz, Sanger-Katz, and Quealy Reference Katz, Sanger-Katz and Quealy2020); antipathy toward Trump, including his cavalier treatment of experts within his own government; and widespread mask wearing by other Democratic elites, including Joe Biden.

As cases and deaths rose in their states, some Republican governors like Kay Ivey of Alabama eventually accepted the need for mask mandates. But numerous other Republican governors, notably Kristi Noem in South Dakota, Brian Kemp in Georgia, Ron DeSantis in Florida, and Doug Ducey in Arizona, resisted statewide mandates throughout even the third wave of the US epidemic. By the end of 2020, 38 states required masks indoors (Level 2 or higher). All 12 of the states that did not have broad indoor mandates at the end of the year were led by Republican governors.

In many localities, mask-wearing norms seem to have developed that will have positive longer-term consequences for pandemic response (van der Westhuizen et al. Reference van der Westhuizen, Kotze, Tonkin-Crine, Gobat and Greenhalgh2020). However, partisan politics delayed the adoption of an affordable and effective intervention to reduce coronavirus spread. There is reason to be concerned that this politicization of public health may also hinder future public health efforts that depend on rapid and widespread compliance, coherent elite messaging, and public buy-in.

In early 2021, with the third wave still ebbing, new variants of the coronavirus spreading in the United States, and vaccination rates still too low to prevent further surges, four states with Republican governors ended their statewide mandates: North Dakota (January 18, 2021), Iowa (February 7, 2021), Montana (February 12, 2021), and Texas (March 10, 2021). Although Trump is no longer in office, his enduring support among Republican voters means Republican leaders still have limited incentives to support ongoing mitigation efforts against COVID-19. In the short run, this absence of leadership is of special concern given high levels of vaccine hesitancy among Republican self-identifiers. As of early March 2021, 41% of Republicans and 49% of Republican men surveyed would refuse a COVID-19 vaccine, compared to 30% of all Americans, 11% of Democrats, and just 6% of Democratic men (Marist Poll 2021).

In the longer run, the finding that increasing party polarization blocked even the most cost-effective measures for combating COVID-19 bodes poorly for future responses to public health crises. Functioning representative democracies depend on accountability. Elected officials must believe that voters may hold them accountable for harmful socioeconomic outcomes. This retrospective voting model is threatened when voters are successfully encouraged to view issues largely in terms of “us” versus “them.” The tragedy, of course, is that infectious diseases do not make partisan distinctions, nor are they confined within state lines. The consequences of public policy failure are not confined to those who oppose public health interventions: they are suffered by all.

Data Availability Statement

Replication materials are available on SPPQ Dataverse at https://doi.org/10.15139/S3/OPMEHK.

Acknowledgments

The authors would like to thank Rachel Castellano, Carolyn Dapper, Megan Erickson, and Rebecca Walcott for policy coding assistance, Erika Steiskal for graphic design assistance, and Jake Grumbach for helpful suggestions. Data on state policy responses to COVID-19, including policies on masks, are available at http://covid19statepolicy.org.

Funding Statement

The authors gratefully acknowledge support from the Center for Statistics and the Social Sciences at the University of Washington, the Donald R. Matthews Fund at the University of Washington, and the Benificus Foundation.

Conflict of Interest

The authors declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.

Methods Appendix

This section provides additional details on our modeling strategy and results. We estimate an event history model to predict the timing of announced mask mandates across US states from April 1, 2020, to December 31, 2020. Specifically, we model the likelihood that a state will implement a mask mandate of at least Level 2 (broadly requiring face coverings indoors) as a function of time in days with a Cox proportional hazards model, clustering standard errors by state. All states are considered at risk of adopting a mandate starting on April 1, and remain at risk until they adopt a mandate at either Level 2 or Level 3. In this model, the baseline hazard rate nonparametrically captures the effects of purely national trends—such as the common tendency of states to adopt mask mandates due to the national resurgence of new COVID-19 cases and deaths, or as a result of new scientific findings regarding the effectiveness of masks in reducing coronavirus transmission. This leaves only cross-state variation in the timing of mask mandates to be explained by covariates.

Our primary specification, reported in Table 1, includes two time-invariant covariates—the ideological orientation of each state’s citizenry and the party of the governor (Fording Reference Fording2018; The National Conference of State Legislators 2020). We also control for a time-varying covariate, the daily reported COVID-19 deaths per million population in each state using case data from The New York Times (The New York Times 2020) and population data from the US Census (Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation 2017). Deaths per million enter the model both as a seven-day average, to smooth over differential rates of reporting over weekends and weekdays, and logged, to allow for diminishing marginal effects of rising COVID-19 deaths and to mitigate the influence of outliers, which in some cases likely reflect idiosyncratic reporting delays.

Table 1. Hazard ratios from the baseline Cox proportional hazards model of state-level mask mandates, Level 2 or higher, April 1 to December 31, 2020

Note. Each row shows the hazard ratio for the counterfactual change in the covariate listed at the left. To simplify comparison across covariates with different scales of measurement, hazard ratios for the interquartile range are shown for continuous covariates. Covariates with both 95 confidence limits above 1.0 significantly increase the chance of adopting a statewide mask mandate. Standard errors used to compute confidence intervals (CIs) are clustered by state. The concordance index shows the proportion of all pairs of states for which the model correctly predicts which state will adopt a mask mandate first. Schoenfeld residuals show no evidence of violation of proportionality for any covariate. The Efron method is used to resolve ties.

Logging this term improves model fit (concordance increases from 0.809 to 0.812), but poses the problem of how to deal with seven-day averages over periods with no reported deaths. A common but flawed solution is to add a small “fudge” factor (e.g., 0.01 or 1) to cases of zero deaths to ensure the log of deaths per million is always defined; however, this technique produces different results depending on the (arbitrary) amount added. This is an underappreciated but unsurprising problem, as the range of plausible adjustments covers several orders of magnitude. While differences across plausible “fudge” factors do not affect our substantive or statistical conclusions enough to change our findings, a nonarbitrary solution is preferable. Instead, we rely on the data to suggest the appropriate treatment of zeros by including an additional covariate indicating cases where the moving average of deaths is exactly zero. In turn, before logging the moving average of deaths, we replace zeros with ones, ensuring (without loss of generality) that the zero cases “drop out” of the log term. The results from this zero-adjusted log specification are similar to those from models that use a “fudge” factor, but arguably less arbitrary and more data-driven.

We present our results in several formats. The exponentiated coefficients for every model we estimated (including all sensitivity analyses shown in Figures 3 and 4) are contained in Tables 3–5. However, because many of our covariates are continuous, exponentiated coefficients can be difficult to directly interpret or compare. Instead, hazard ratios for substantively relevant counterfactual scenarios associated with each covariate in our primary model are reported in Table 1. For continuous covariates, we show the hazard ratio associated with an interquartile shift in the covariate, as recommended by Harrell (Reference Harrell2015). These are the hazard ratios reported in the top panel of Figure 2 in the main text. Following the approach of Adolph et al. (Reference Adolph, Amano, Bang-Jensen, Fullman and Wilkerson2021a), we further contextualize these findings by computing the average marginal effect of each covariate averaged across the 50 states (Harden and Kropko Reference Harden and Kropko2019), expressed as the expected days of delay associated with each covariate, averaged across the 50 states with all other covariates taking on their observed values day by day for each state. These quantities are shown in the bottom of Figure 2 in the main text. In parallel fashion, we collect in Table 2 the counterfactual hazard ratios for the model of Level 3 mandates shown in Figure 5 in the main text.

Table 2. Hazard ratios from the baseline Cox proportional hazards model of state-level mask mandates, Level 3 only, April 1 to December 31, 2020

Note. Each row shows the hazard ratio for the counterfactual change in the covariate listed at the left. To simplify comparison across covariates with different scales of measurement, hazard ratios for the interquartile range are shown for continuous covariates. Covariates with both 95 confidence limits above 1.0 significantly increase the chance of adopting a statewide mask mandate. Standard errors used to compute confidence intervals (CIs) are clustered by state. The concordance index shows the proportion of all pairs of states for which the model correctly predicts which state will adopt a mask mandate first. The Schoenfeld residuals show no evidence of violation of proportionality for any covariate. The Efron method is used to resolve ties.

Table 3. Cox proportional hazards models of state-level mask mandates, Level 2 or higher: alternative epidemiological data

Note. Cell entries in the top half of the table are exponentiated coefficients from Cox proportional hazards models of the time to issuing a Level 2 or higher statewide mask mandate, with p-values shown below each coefficient. Because some covariates are continuous, care should be taken in interpreting these quantities, especially when comparing them across covariates. Standard errors used to compute p-values are clustered by state. Model 1 above is the baseline model further explored in Figure 2 and Table 1; Models 2–10 are further illustrated in Figure 3. The source of epidemiological data is listed under each model (NYT indicates The New York Times, CTP the Covid Tracking Project, and JHU John Hopkins University. All models in this table are estimated over the period April 1, 2020, to December 31, 2020. The concordance index shows the proportion of all pairs of states for which the model correctly predicts which state will adopt a mask mandate first. Schoenfeld residuals show no evidence of violation of proportionality for any covariate. The Efron method is used to resolve ties.

Table 4. Cox proportional hazards models of state-level mask mandates, Level 2 or higher: additional control variables

Note. Cell entries in the top half of the table are exponentiated coefficients from Cox proportional hazards models of the time to issuing a Level 2 or higher statewide mask mandate, with p-values shown below each coefficient. Because some covariates are continuous, care should be taken in interpreting these quantities, especially when comparing them across covariates. Standard errors used to compute p-values are clustered by state. Models 11 and 12 are further explored in the top half of Figure 4. All epidemiological data are taken from The New York Times. All models in this table are estimated over the period April 1, 2020, to December 31, 2020. The concordance index shows the proportion of all pairs of states for which the model correctly predicts which state will adopt a mask mandate first. Schoenfeld residuals show no evidence of violation of proportionality for any covariate. The Efron method is used to resolve ties.

Table 5. Cox proportional hazards models of state-level mask mandates: alternative scope conditions and outcome measures

Note. Cell entries in the top half of the table are exponentiated coefficients from Cox proportional hazards models of the time to issuing a Level 2 or higher statewide mask mandate, with p-values shown below each coefficient. Because some covariates are continuous, care should be taken in interpreting these quantities, especially when comparing them across covariates. Standard errors used to compute p-values are clustered by state. Models 21–26 are further explored in the bottom half of Figure 4; Model 27 is further illustrated in Figure 5 and Table 2. All epidemiological data are taken from The New York Times. Models vary in the temporal range of data included, what counts as an initial mask mandate, when states are first considered at risk of adopting a mandate, and whether state-coordinated substate mask mandates are included in the analysis. Trigger date indicates whether the mask policy is counted as an event at the time of issuance or at the time the mandate is enacted. Count first substate policy? indicates whether the presence of state-coordinated county-level mask policies count as the first mask mandate, alongside statewide mandates (which always count). The concordance index shows the proportion of all pairs of states for which the model correctly predicts which state will adopt a mask mandate first. The Schoenfeld residuals show no evidence of violation of proportionality for any covariate. The Efron method is used to resolve ties.

In addition to the primary model reported in Table 1 and Figure 2, we consider a series of sensitivity analyses of our model of Mandates at Level 2+. Throughout these analyses, we attempt to keep each estimated model parsimonious, as including too many covariates is a particular concern for event history models with small numbers of observed events (Peduzzi et al. Reference Peduzzi, Concato, Feinstein and Holford1995). The first sensitivity analyses reported in Figure 3 simply replace The New York Times death data used in the primary model with data from alternative sources (Center for Systems Science and Engineering, Johns Hopkins University 2020; The COVID Tracking Project 2020). However, most of the sensitivity analyses, including those shown in the top half of Figure 3, retain the covariates of the primary model and serially add a single additional covariate. The underlying estimates for each sensitivity analysis are collected in Tables 3–5.

Analyses were performed in R (version 4.0.2) using the survival and coxed (Harden and Kropko Reference Harden and Kropko2019) packages. Across every model presented in the paper, the Schoenfeld residuals for each covariate show no evidence of violation of proportionality, supporting the proportional hazards assumption. All visualizations were constructed using the tile package (Adolph Reference Adolph2020). Complete replication materials can be found in Adolph et al. (Reference Adolph, Amano, Bang-Jensen, Fullman, Magistro, Reinke and Wilkerson2021b).

Author Biographies

Christopher Adolph is Professor of Political Science at the University of Washington, with a joint appointment in the Center for Statistics & the Social Sciences. He specializes in political methodology, comparative public policy, and comparative political economy, with interests in health policy, fiscal policy, and monetary policy.

Kenya Amano is a Ph.D. student in the Department of Political Science at the University of Washington. His research concerns the intersection of economic institutions and politics with an emphasis on monetary policy, fiscal policy, and regulation; he is also interested in data science tools and methods, including causal influence techniques and text-as-data.

Bree Bang-Jensen is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Political Science at the University of Washington. In addition to her research on state responses to COVID-19, she studies factors that lead to deviation in international cooperation and the political effects of economic crisis.

Nancy Fullman, MPH is a Ph.D. student in the Department of Global Health at the University of Washington. Her research interests primarily involve impact evaluations of health service delivery and outcomes; healthcare access and utilization; vaccine coverage and vaccination determinants; and malaria control and elimination interventions.

Beatrice Magistro is a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Toronto and the Schwartz Reisman Institute for Technology and Society. Her research interests cover a broad range of topics in comparative political economy, political behavior, and public opinion, in particular the attraction of citizens to populist movements.

Grace Reinke is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Political Science at the University of Washington. Her dissertation research analyzes the intersections of feminist political theory, American politics, and extractive capitalist regimes using methods informed by Social Reproduction Theory.

John Wilkerson is Donald R. Matthews Distinguished Professor and Chair of the Department of Political Science at the University of Washington. He specializes in legislative politics and computational methods.

Footnotes

1 We use “waves” to denote sustained periods of surging COVID-19 cases across the United States which were followed by sustained periods of declining cases, while noting that some states followed different patterns of surging and declining new cases over the course of the epidemic (Zhang, Arroyo Marioli, and Gao Reference Zhang, Arroyo Marioli and Gao2021).

2 Mississippi has a particularly complex history of statewide and state-coordinated county-level mandates. On May 12, 2020, Governor Tate Reeves issued a Level 2 mask mandate initially applying to just seven counties which accounted for a total of less than a quarter million residents or approximately 7% of Mississippi’s 2019 population (U.S. Census Bureau, Population Division 2020a; State of Mississippi 2020a). The list of counties placed under this mandate varied over the following months until, on August 4, 2020, Reeves issued a statewide mandate at Level 3 (State of Mississippi 2020b), only to end that mandate on September 30, 2020 (State of Mississippi 2020c). On October 19, 2020, Reeves again issued substate mask requirements, this time at Level 2 and initially applied to just eight counties comprising more than half a million residents (State of Mississippi 2020d). By December 23, 2020, 78 of Mississippi’s 82 counties and more than 99% of the state population were covered by the substate mandate (U.S. Census Bureau, Population Division 2020a; State of Mississippi 2020e), which Reeves then ended on March 3, 2021 (State of Mississippi 2021).

3 Population coverage of mask mandates calculated by the authors using 2019 population estimates from the US Census (U.S. Census Bureau, Population Division 2020b).

4 We create daily measures of the trend in deaths for each state-day. First, we construct a retrospective two-week window of the seven-day moving average of daily deaths per million population. (As in our measures of death rates, seven-day averages are again needed to smooth out idiosyncrasies in reporting over different days of the week.) We then estimate the linear trend on this window, and use this slope estimate as our trend variable.

5 This control is available over the whole period only from the COVID Tracking Project.

6 While some cities and counties adopted mask mandates on their own initiative, such efforts are outside the scope of our analysis, which seeks to understand actions by state political leaders. For our purposes, the potentially relevant substate mask mandates are those substate mandates of at least Level 2 that were coordinated by the state government.

References

Adolph, Christopher. 2020. “tile.” R Package. Version 0.4.15. http://faculty.washington.edu/cadolph/software.Google Scholar
Adolph, Christopher, Amano, Kenya, Bang-Jensen, Bree, Fullman, Nancy, Magistro, Beatrice, Reinke, Grace, and Wilkerson, John. 2021b. “Replication Data for: Governor Partisanship Explains the Adoption of Statewide Mask Mandates in Response to COVID-19.” UNC Dataverse. Datset. https://doi.org/10.15139/S3/OPMEHK.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Adolph, Christopher, Amano, Kenya, Bang-Jensen, Bree, Fullman, Nancy, and Wilkerson, John. 2021a. “Pandemic Politics: Timing State-Level Social Distancing Responses to COVID-19.” Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law 46 (2): 211–32.10.1215/03616878-8802162CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ado lph, Christopher, Breunig, Christian, and Koski, Chris. 2020. “The Political Economy of Budget Trade-Offs.” Journal of Public Policy 40 (1): 2550.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Anzia, Sarah F. 2011. “Election Timing and the Electoral Influence of Interest Groups.” Journal of Politics 73 (2): 412–27.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ashworth, Scott. 2012. “Electoral Accountability: Recent Theoretical and Empirical Work.” Annual Review of Political Science 15 (1): 183201.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
BBC. 2020. “Coronavirus: Donald Trump Vows Not to Order Americans to Wear Masks.” Report. https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-53453468.Google Scholar
Capraro, Valerio, and Barcelo, Hélène. 2020. “The Effect of Messaging and Gender on Intentions to Wear a Face Covering to Slow Down COVID-19 Transmission.” PsyArXiv. https://psyarxiv.com/tg7vz/.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Caughey, Devin, Warshaw, Christopher, and Xu, Yiqing. 2017. “Incremental Democracy: The Policy Effects of Partisan Control of State Government.” Journal of Politics 79 (4): 1342–58.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Center for Systems Science and Engineering, Johns Hopkins University. 2020. “2019 Novel Coronavirus COVID-19 (2019-nCoV) Data Repository.” Data File. https://github.com/CSSEGISandData/COVID-19.Google Scholar
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 2020. “Recommendation Regarding the Use of Cloth Face Coverings, Especially in Areas of Significant Community-Based Transmission.” Report. https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/prevent-getting-sick/cloth-face-cover.html.Google Scholar
Chu, Derek K., Akl, Elie A., Duda, Stephanie, Solo, Karla, Yaacoub, Sally, and Schünemann, Holger J.. 2020. “Physical Distancing, Face Masks, and Eye Protection to Prevent Person-to-Person Transmission of SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.” The Lancet 395 (10242): 1973–87.10.1016/S0140-6736(20)31142-9CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Clinton, Joshua, Cohen, Jon, Lapinski, John S., and Trussler, Marc. 2020. “Partisan Pandemic: How Partisanship and Public Health Concerns Affect Individuals’ Social Distancing During COVID-19.” SSRN. https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3633934.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
de Benedictis-Kessner, Justin, and Warshaw, Christopher. 2020a. “Accountability for the Local Economy at All Levels of Government in United States Elections.” American Political Science Review 114 (3): 660–76.10.1017/S0003055420000027CrossRefGoogle Scholar
de Benedictis-Kessner, Justin, and Warshaw, Christopher. 2020b. “Politics in Forgotten Governments: The Partisan Composition of County Legislatures and County Fiscal Policies.” Journal of Politics 82 (2): 460–75.10.1086/706458CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Desmarais, Bruce, Harden, Jeffrey J., and Boehmke, Frederick J.. 2015. “Persistent Policy Pathways: Inferring Diffusion Networks in the American States.” American Political Science Review 109 (2): 392406.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Erikson, Robert S., Wright, Gerald C., and McIver, John P.. 1993. Statehouse Democracy: Public Opinion and Policy in the American States. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Fearon, James D. 1999. “Electoral Accountability and the Control of Politicians: Selecting Good Types Versus Sanctioning Poor Performance.” In Democracy, Accountability, and Representation, eds. Przeworski, Adam, Stokes, Susan and Manin, Bernard, 5597. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ferejohn, John. 1986. “Incumbent Performance and Electoral Control.” Public Choice 50 (1/3): 525.10.1007/BF00124924CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fording, Richard C. 2018. “Updated Measures of Citizen and Government Ideology.” Data File. https://rcfording.com/state-ideology-data/.Google Scholar
Fullman, Nancy, Bang-Jensen, Bree, Reinke, Grace, Magistro, Beatrice, Castellano, Rachel, Erickson, Megan, Dapper, Carolyn, Walcott, Rebecca, Amano, Kenya, Wilkerson, John, and Adolph, Christopher. 2021. “State-Level Social Distancing Policies in Response to COVID-19 in the US.” Version 1.120, March 10. http://www.covid19statepolicy.org/.Google Scholar
Gallup. 2020. “Presidential Approval Ratings—Donald Trump.” https://news.gallup.com/poll/203198/presidential-approval-ratings-donald-trump.aspx.Google Scholar
Garand, James C. 1988. “Localism and Regionalism in Presidential Elections: Is There a Home State or Regional Advantage?Political Research Quarterly 41 (1): 85103.Google Scholar
Glick, Peter. 2020. “Masks and Emasculation: Why Some Men Refuse to Take Safety Precautions.” Scientific American (April 30). https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/observations/masks-and-emasculation-why-some-men-refuse-to-take-safety-precautions/.Google Scholar
Glick, Peter, Berdahl, Jennifer L., and Alonso, Natalya M.. 2018. “Development and Validation of the Masculinity Contest Culture Scale.” Journal of Social Issues 74 (3): 449–76.10.1111/josi.12280CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grumbach, Jacob M. 2018. “From Backwaters to Major Policymakers: Policy Polarization in the States, 1970–2014.” Perspectives on Politics 16 (2): 416–35.10.1017/S153759271700425XCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grumbach, Jacob M. 2020. “Interest Group Activists and the Polarization of State Legislatures.” Legislative Studies Quarterly 45 (1): 534.10.1111/lsq.12244CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guy, Gery P. Jr., Lee, Florence, Sunshine, Gregory, McCord, Russell, Howard-Williams, Mara, Kompaniyets, Lyudmyla, Dunphy, Christopher, et al. 2021. “Association of State-Issued Mask Mandates and Allowing On-Premises Restaurant Dining with County-Level COVID-19 Case and Death Growth Rates—United States, March 1–December 31, 2020.” MMWR Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report 70 (10): 350–4. doi:10.15585/mmwr.mm7010e3.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Harden, Jeffrey J., and Kropko, Jonathan. 2019. “Simulating Duration Data for the Cox Model.” Political Science Research and Methods 7 (4): 921–8.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harmes, Adam. 2019. The Politics of Fiscal Federalism: Neoliberalism Versus Social Democracy in Multilevel Governance. Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press.Google Scholar
Harrell, Frank E. Jr. 2015. Regression Modeling Strategies: With Applications to Linear Models, Logistic and Ordinal Regression, and Survival Analysis, 2nd edition. New York: Springer.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harvard Global Health Institute. 2020. “Hospital Capacity by State.” Data File. https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1XUVyZF3X_4m72ztFnXZFvDKn5Yys1aKgu2Zmefd7wVo/edit#gid=1576394115.Google Scholar
Healy, Andrew, and Malhotra, Neil. 2013. “Retrospective Voting Reconsidered.” Annual Review of Political Science 16 (1): 285306.10.1146/annurev-polisci-032211-212920CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hendrix, M. Joshua, Walde, Charles, Findley, Kendra, and Trotman, Robin. 2020. “Absence of Apparent Transmission of SARS-CoV-2 from Two Stylists After Exposure at a Hair Salon with a Universal Face Covering Policy—Springfield, Missouri, May 2020.” MMWR and Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report 69 (28): 930–2. https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/69/wr/mm6928e2.htm.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hopkins, Daniel J. 2018. The Increasingly United States: How and Why American Political Behavior Nationalized. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hopkins, Daniel J., and Pettingill, Lindsay M.. 2018. “Retrospective Voting in Big-City US Mayoral Elections.” Political Science Research and Methods 6 (4): 697714.10.1017/psrm.2016.54CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Howard, Jeremy, Huang, Austin, Li, Zhiyuan, Tufekci, Zeynep, Zdimal, Vladimir, van der Westhuizen, Helene-Mari, von Delft, Arne, et al. 2020. “Face Masks Against COVID-19: An Evidence Review.” Preprints (April 10). https://www.preprints.org/manuscript/202004.0203/v1.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Igielnik, Ruth. 2020. “Most Americans Say They Regularly Wore a Mask in Stores in the Past Month; Fewer See Others Doing It.” Pew Research Center (June 23). https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2020/06/23/most-americans-say-they-regularly-wore-a-mask-in-stores-in-the-past-month-fewer-see-others-doing-it/.Google Scholar
Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation. 2017. “Global Burden of Disease Study 2017 Population Estimates 1950–2017.” Data File. http://ghdx.healthdata.org/record/ihme-data/gbd-2017-population-estimates-1950-2017.Google Scholar
Jacobs, David, and Carmichael, Jason T.. 2002. “The Political Sociology of the Death Penalty: A Pooled Time-Series Analysis.” American Sociological Review 67 (1): 109–31.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Javid, Babak, and Balaban, Nathalie Q.. 2020. “Impact of Population Mask Wearing on Covid-19 Post Lockdown.” medRxiv. https://www.medrxiv.org/content/early/2020/06/02/2020.04.13.20063529.10.1101/2020.04.13.20063529CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kaplan, Thomas, and Thrush, Glenn. 2020. “Biden, Seizing on Masks as a Campaign Issue, Calls for a Mandate.” The New York Times (August 13). https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/13/us/politics/wear-masks-mandate-biden.html.Google Scholar
Katz, Josh, Sanger-Katz, Margot, and Quealy, Kevin. 2020. “A Detailed Map of Who Is Wearing Masks in the U.S.” The New York Times (July 17). https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/07/17/upshot/coronavirus-face-mask-map.html.Google Scholar
Konisky, David M. 2007. “Regulatory Competition and Environmental Enforcement: Is There a Race to the Bottom?American Journal of Political Science 51 (4): 853–72.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Leatherby, Lauren. 2020. “Why Are Coronavirus Cases Decreasing? Experts Say Restrictions Are Working.” The New York Times (August 24). https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/08/24/us/coronavirus-cases-decreasing.html.Google Scholar
Lyu, Wei, and Wehby, George L.. 2020. “Community Use of Face Masks and COVID-19: Evidence from a Natural Experiment of State Mandates in the US.” Health Affairs 39 (8): 1419–25.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Marist Poll. 2021. “NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist Poll Results: The Biden Administration & COVID-19.” http://maristpoll.marist.edu/npr-pbs-newshour-marist-poll-results-the-biden-administration-covid-19.Google Scholar
Masket, Seth. 2009. No Middle Ground: How Informal Party Organizations Control Nominations and Polarize Legislatures. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Masks4All. 2020. “What Countries Have Mask Laws?” Report. https://masks4all.co/what-countries-have-mask-laws/.Google Scholar
Oates, Wallace E. 1999. “An Essay on Fiscal Federalism.” Journal of Economic Literature 37 (3): 1120–49.10.1257/jel.37.3.1120CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Peduzzi, Peter, Concato, John, Feinstein, Alvan R., and Holford, Theodore R.. 1995. “Importance of Events per Independent Variable in Proportional Hazards Regression Analysis. II. Accuracy and Precision of Regression Estimates.” Journal of Clinical Epidemiology 48 (12): 1503–10.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Peterson, Paul E. 1981. City Limits. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rogers, Steven. 2016. “National Forces in State Legislative Elections.” The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 667 (1): 207–25.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shor, Boris, and McCarty, Nolan. 2011. “The Ideological Mapping of American Legislatures.” American Political Science Review 103 (3): 530–51.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Simply Analytics. 2018. “Cable News Viewership: Fox News.” Data File.Google Scholar
State of Alaska. 2020. “COVID-19 Health Mandate 016.” April 22. Archived at http://covid19statepolicy.org as State Policy Source Alaska0014.Google Scholar
State of Minnesota. 2020. “Emergency Executive Order 2020-81.” July 22. Archived at http://covid19statepolicy.org as State Policy Source Minnesota0023.Google Scholar
State of Mississippi. 2020a. “Executive Order No. 1483.” May 12. Archived at http://covid19statepolicy.org as State Policy Source Mississippi0012.Google Scholar
State of Mississippi. 2020b. “Executive Order No. 1516.” August 4. Archived at http://covid19statepolicy.org as State Policy Source Mississippi0029.Google Scholar
State of Mississippi. 2020c. “Executive Order No. 1525.” September 30. Archived at http://covid19statepolicy.org as State Policy Source Mississippi0037.Google Scholar
State of Mississippi. 2020d. “Executive Order No. 1527.” October 19. Archived at http://covid19statepolicy.org as State Policy Source Mississippi0038.Google Scholar
State of Mississippi. 2020e. “Executive Order No. 1539.” December 22. Archived at http://covid19statepolicy.org as State Policy Source Mississippi0047.Google Scholar
State of Mississippi. 2021. “Executive Order No. 1549.” March 2. Archived at http://covid19statepolicy.org as State Policy Source Mississippi0050.Google Scholar
State of New Hampshire. 2020. “Emergency Order 63 Pursuant to Executive Order 2020-04.” August 11. Archived at http://covid19statepolicy.org as State Policy Source NewHampshire0023.Google Scholar
State of New York. 2020. “Executive Order 202.17.” April 15. Archived at http://covid19statepolicy.org as State Policy Source NewYork0012.Google Scholar
State of Oklahoma. 2020. “Seventh Amended Executive Order 2020-20.” November 16. Archived at http://covid19statepolicy.org as State Policy Source Oklahoma0036.Google Scholar
State of Utah. 2020. “Executive Order 2020/034/EO.” June 26. Archived at http://covid19statepolicy.org as State Policy Source Utah0029.Google Scholar
State of Vermont. 2020a. “Addendum 12 to Executive Order 01-20.” May 1. Archived at http://covid19statepolicy.org as State Policy Source Vermont0012.Google Scholar
State of Vermont. 2020b. “Addendum 2 to Amended and Restated Executive Order 01-20.” July 24. Archived at http://covid19statepolicy.org as State Policy Source Vermont0022.Google Scholar
State of Washington. 2020. “Order of the Secretary of Health 20-03.1.” July 24. Archived at http://covid19statepolicy.org as State Policy Source Washington0046.Google Scholar
Stutt, Richard O. J. H., Retkute, Renata, Bradley, Michael, Gilligan, Christopher A., and Colvin, John. 2020. “A Modelling Framework to Assess the Likely Effectiveness of Facemasks in Combination with ‘Lock-Down’ in Managing the COVID-19 Pandemic.” Proceedings of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences 476 (2238): 20200376. doi:10.1098/rspa.2020.0376.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Testa, Christian C., Krieger, Nancy, Chen, Jarvis T., and Hanage, William P.. 2020. “Visualizing the Lagged Connection Between COVID-19 Cases and Deaths in the United States: An Animation Using per Capita State-Level Data (January 22, 2020–July 8, 2020).” HCPDS Working Paper 19 (4). https://cdn1.sph.harvard.edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/1266/2020/07/HCPDS-WP_19_4_testa-et-al_Visualizing-Lagged-Connection-Between-COVID-19-Cases-and-Deaths-in-US_final_07_10_with-cover.pdf.Google Scholar
The COVID Tracking Project. 2020. “States Current and Historical Data.” Data File. https://covidtracking.com/data/api.Google Scholar
The National Conference of State Legislators. 2020. “State Partisan Composition.” Data File. https://www.ncsl.org/research/about-state-legislatures/partisan-composition.aspx.Google Scholar
The New York Times. 2020. “Coronavirus (Covid-19) Data in the United States.”. https://github.com/nytimes/covid-19-data.Google Scholar
The New York Times Staff. 2017. “Presidential Election Results: Donald J. Trump Wins.” The New York Times (9 August). https://www.nytimes.com/elections/2016/results/president.Google Scholar
U.S. Census Bureau, Population Division. 2020a. “Annual Estimates of the Resident Population for Counties in Mississippi: April 1, 2010 to July 1, 2019 (CO-EST2019-ANNRES-28).” Data File. https://www2.census.gov/programs-surveys/popest/tables/2010-2019/counties/totals/co-est2019-annres-28.xlsx.Google Scholar
U.S. Census Bureau, Population Division. 2020b. “Annual Estimates of the Resident Population for the United States, Regions, States, and Puerto Rico: April 1, 2010 to July 1, 2019 (NST-EST2019-01).” Data File. https://www2.census.gov/programs-surveys/popest/tables/2010-2019/state/totals/nst-est2019–01.xlsx.Google Scholar
US Bureau of Economic Analysis. 2020. “Gross State Product.” Data File. https://www.bea.gov/data/gdp/gdp-state.Google Scholar
US Census. 2017. “Population Density.” Data File.Google Scholar
van der Westhuizen, Helene-Mari, Kotze, Koot, Tonkin-Crine, Sarah, Gobat, Nina, and Greenhalgh, Trisha. 2020. “Face Coverings for Covid-19: From Medical Intervention to Social Practice.” BMJ 370: m3021.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wilson, Nick, Kvalsvig, Amanda, Barnard, Lucy Telfar, and Baker, Michael G.. 2020. “Case-Fatality Risk Estimates for COVID-19 Calculated by Using a Lag Time for Fatality.” Emerging Infectious Diseases 26 (6): 1339–441. https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/eid/article/26/6/20-0320_article.10.3201/eid2606.200320CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Zhang, Stephen X., Arroyo Marioli, Francisco, and Gao, Renfei. 2021. “A Second Wave? What Do People Mean by COVID Waves?—A Working Definition of Epidemic Waves.” medRxiv. doi:10.1101/2021.02.21.21252147.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Figure 0

Figure 1. Adoption of broad statewide mask mandates in 2020.Note. Weeks counted from March 1, 2020, for convenience. States listed as having Level 1 mandates are those which never adopted stronger mandates. Except for Mississippi, all states that introduced Level 2 or Level 3 statewide mask mandates maintained them at least through December 31, 2020. Except for Montana (which issued a Level 3 mandate on January 13, 2021, then repealed its mandate on February 12, 2021), no state adopted a higher statewide mask mandate in the first two months of 2021.Source. Authors’ original data (Fullman et al. 2021).

Figure 1

Figure 2. Relative probability (a) and expected delay (b) of adopting at least a Level 2 mask mandate, by factor.Note. The top panel shows on a log scale the estimated hazard ratios obtained from a Cox proportional hazards model on mask mandates adopted by the 50 states, April 1 to December 31, 2020. Red circles mark the hazard ratios for political covariates, and purple circles indicate hazard ratios for other covariates. The bottom panel shows on a linear scale the estimated average marginal effects obtained by post-estimation simulation from the model. The red square marks the combined effect of partisanship and ideology, red circles indicate the independent effects of governor party and citizen ideology, and purple circles indicate average marginal effects for other covariates. Horizontal lines are 95% confidence intervals. Solid symbols indicate significance at the 0.05 level.

Figure 2

Figure 3. Sensitivity of results to alternative COVID-19 epidemiological indicators.Note. Estimated hazard ratios of mask mandate adoption (Level 2 or higher) for various epidemiological indicators (in purple) and for Democratic governors (in red) from a series of Cox proportional hazards models adding each epidemiological covariate using data from the source listed at the left of the plot. Horizontal lines are 95% confidence intervals. Solid symbols indicate significance at the 0.05 level; shaded symbols indicate significance at the 0.1 level. Axes are log scaled.

Figure 3

Figure 4. Democratic governors’ greater propensity to enact mask mandates is highly robust.Note. Estimated hazard ratios of mask mandate adoption (Level 2 or higher) for the effect of Democratic governors from a series of Cox proportional hazards models including various added controls or alternative outcome measures. Horizontal lines are 95% confidence intervals (CIs). Solid symbols indicate significance at the 0.05 level. Arrows indicate CIs that extend outside the plotting range. Axes are log scaled. “Substate mandates” refers to mandates that apply to county-specific mandates coordinated by the state government and does not include local ordinances.

Figure 4

Figure 5. Relative probability (a) and expected delay (b) of adopting a Level 3 mandate for public masks, by factor.Note. The top panel shows on a log scale the estimated hazard ratios obtained from a Cox proportional hazards model on mask mandates adopted by the 50 states, April 1 to December 31, 2020. Red circles mark the hazard ratios for political covariates, and purple circles indicate hazard ratios for other covariates. The bottom panel shows on a linear scale the estimated average marginal effects obtained by post-estimation simulation from the model. The red square marks the combined effect of partisanship and ideology, red circles indicate the independent effects of governor party and citizen ideology, and purple circles indicate average marginal effects for other covariates. Horizontal lines are 95% confidence intervals. Solid symbols indicate significance at the 0.05 level.

Figure 5

Table 1. Hazard ratios from the baseline Cox proportional hazards model of state-level mask mandates, Level 2 or higher, April 1 to December 31, 2020

Figure 6

Table 2. Hazard ratios from the baseline Cox proportional hazards model of state-level mask mandates, Level 3 only, April 1 to December 31, 2020

Figure 7

Table 3. Cox proportional hazards models of state-level mask mandates, Level 2 or higher: alternative epidemiological data

Figure 8

Table 4. Cox proportional hazards models of state-level mask mandates, Level 2 or higher: additional control variables

Figure 9

Table 5. Cox proportional hazards models of state-level mask mandates: alternative scope conditions and outcome measures

Supplementary material: Link

Adolph et al. Dataset

Link