articleThe Journal of PoliticsMar 27, 2008Closed access

Is Polarization a Myth?

Emory University · Colorado State University

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Abstract

This article uses data from the American National Election Studies and national exit polls to test Fiorina’s assertion that ideological polarization in the American public is a myth. Fiorina argues that twenty-first-century Americans, like the midtwentieth-century Americans described by Converse, ‘‘are not very well-informed about politics, do not hold many of their views very strongly, and are not ideological’ ’ (2006, 19). However, our evidence indicates that since the 1970s, ideological polarization has increased dramatically among the mass public in the United States as well as among political elites. There are now large differences in outlook between Democrats and Republicans, between red state voters and…

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Authors

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Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Polarization (electrochemistry)
  • Ideology
  • Assertion
  • Politics
  • Politics of the United States
  • Political science
  • Voter turnout
  • Mythology
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