{"id":356912,"date":"2019-01-04T12:10:18","date_gmt":"2019-01-04T17:10:18","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.rochester.edu\/newscenter\/?p=356912"},"modified":"2019-01-04T12:19:21","modified_gmt":"2019-01-04T17:19:21","slug":"partisanship-bright-line-watch-vote-democrat-republican-356912","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.rochester.edu\/newscenter\/partisanship-bright-line-watch-vote-democrat-republican-356912\/","title":{"rendered":"Would you vote for a Democrat who behaves like a Republican?"},"content":{"rendered":"

Imagine you are a fairly mainstream Republican voter and are considering Republican candidate Luis Vasquez. He says he wants to raise taxes on the wealthy and believes government should do more to prevent discrimination against racial minorities. Would you still vote for him?<\/p>\n

What if you are a lifelong Democrat? Would you vote for Democratic candidate Hannah Phillips, who wants to lower taxes on everyone, including the wealthy? What if Phillips also espouses views that run counter to established democratic norms and rules, declaring, for instance, that \u201celected officials should not be bound by court decisions they regard as politicized.\u201d<\/p>\n

Hannah Phillips and Luis Vasquez are fictive candidates in an experiment conducted by\u00a0Bright Line Watch<\/a>, a\u00a0group of political scientists, among them Gretchen Helmke<\/a>, professor of political science at the URochester, and Mitchell Sanders<\/a> \u201997 (PhD)\u00a0of Meliora Research, who monitor US democratic practices and potential threats.<\/p>\n

Bright Line Watch<\/a> based its selection of policy questions for the experiment on a recent paper by Vanderbilt University\u2019s Larry Bartels,<\/a> who studies American voters and public opinion, and who found that questions about taxation policy and racial discrimination generate the biggest partisan divides among the US electorate.<\/p>\n

The Bright Line Watch team sampled nearly 1,000 online participants, weighted to approximate a representative sample of the US population: 35 percent of respondents identified as Republicans or Republican-leaning, 43 percent as Democrats or Democratic-leaning, and 17 percent as independents who did not lean toward either party.<\/p>\n

\"illustration<\/p>\n

Each respondent was asked to choose between a pair of hypothetical candidates in an upcoming election. Each candidate was described using eight characteristics: name, party preference, positions on policies toward taxation and racial discrimination, and four positions on democratic values and norms. All characteristics were randomly generated, and at times at direct odds with what most voters would expect from a mainstream Democratic or Republican candidate. Some of the fictive candidates\u2019 views and positions were undemocratic.<\/p>\n

Why? Building on the pioneering work\u00a0done by Yale political scientists Matthew Graham and Milan Svolik,<\/a> the Bright Line Watch team wanted to test how committed the American public really is to its democracy. Are there universal democratic principles that, if violated by politicians, would generate resistance from the public, and would citizens of all political stripes be equally willing to punish candidates for such violations?<\/p>\n

The team\u2019s finding is striking: partisanship outweighs all other factors for both Republicans and Democrats. In other words, a die-hard Democrat is still more likely to vote for the fictive Democratic candidate although she espouses policies and views that are either typically Republican (lowering taxes) or outright undemocratic (elected officials should supervise law enforcement investigations of politicians and their associates). The same holds true for Republican-leaning voters.<\/p>\n

Bright Line Watch also found that all participants value democratic norms related to judicial independence, neutral investigations, and political compromise, but Democrats and Republicans strongly disagree when it comes to questions of voting rights and equal access.<\/p>\n

The Bright Line team\u2014the political scientists John Carey<\/a>\u00a0and Katherine Clayton<\/a>\u00a0at Dartmouth College, Brendan Nyhan<\/a>\u00a0at the University of Michigan, and Susan Stokes\u00a0<\/a>at the University of Chicago, together with Rochester\u2019s Helmke and Meliora Research\u2019s Sanders\u2014focused their survey \u201cParty, Policy, Democracy and Candidate Choice in U.S. Elections\u201d<\/a>\u00a0on the attitudes of ordinary US voters.<\/p>\n

Bernard Avishai<\/a>, a visiting professor of government at Dartmouth (and an adjunct professor of business at Hebrew University in Israel), is a colleague of Carey and Clayton\u2019s. He wrote about the Bright Line Watch study in depth in a recent piece for The New Yorker<\/em>.<\/a><\/p>\n

As Avishai put it succinctly: \u201cThe good news for the Republic is that voters of all party affiliations care about judicial independence. The bad news is that Democrats and Republicans diverge dramatically on the question of access to the polls.\u201d<\/p>\n

\u201cOur results on voter ID laws particularly underscore the partisan divide among voters,\u201d confirms Rochester\u2019s Helmke.<\/p>\n

\u201cThe polarized response to these policies illustrates how partisans can become deeply split over which democratic priorities are worth protecting,\u201d writes the team.<\/p>\n

 <\/p>\n

Here are Bright Line Watch\u2019s key findings:<\/strong><\/h3>\n