Authors
Stephen Ansolabehere, Jonathan Rodden, James M Snyder Jr
Publication date
2006/6/1
Journal
Journal of Economic Perspectives
Volume
20
Issue
2
Pages
97-118
Publisher
American Economic Association
Description
America, we are told, is a nation divided. The cartographers who draw up the maps of U.S. election results have branded a new division in American politics: Republican red versus Democratic blue. What is the source of this division? Most observers point not to the bread-and-butter economic issues of the New Deal alignment but to a “culture war.” In this paper, we draw on data from three decades of survey research to see how the electorate divides along economic and moral issues. While showing that moral values are not irrelevant, the survey data roundly reject the basic claims of the culture war thesis: that voters are polarized over moral issues, and this division maps onto important demographic categories like religious affiliation; that moral issues have more salience or weight in the minds of voters than economic issues; and that this division accounts for red and blue cartography (because red-state voters are …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
S Ansolabehere, J Rodden, JM Snyder Jr - Journal of Economic Perspectives, 2006