The impact of the Covid-19 pandemic in a polarized political system: Lessons from the 2020 election
Given the deep polarization of the American political system in recent decades, was the 2020 presidential election an extension of the pre-existing partisan coalitions or did the Covid-19 pandemic and its economic consequences have a significant impact on the outcome? Using a national probability sa...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Electoral studies 2022-12, Vol.80, p.102548-102548, Article 102548 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Given the deep polarization of the American political system in recent decades, was the 2020 presidential election an extension of the pre-existing partisan coalitions or did the Covid-19 pandemic and its economic consequences have a significant impact on the outcome? Using a national probability sample provided by AmeriSpeak and voter verification provided by Catalist, we construct a structural equation model to examine the relative influence of age, race, gender, education, religious fundamentalism, ideological partisanship, affective partisanship, and measures of Covid-19 experiences and understanding to predict the 2020 vote. We re-construct the partisan polarization landscape to examine the role of politically interested non-partisans in the center of the ideological spectrum and examine their ability to select candidates in response of specific issues. The Covid-19 pandemic had a significant marginal impact on the outcome of the 2020 presidential election.
•Ideological partisanship was the strongest predictor of vote choice in the 2020.•Among nonpartisans, understanding of Covid-19 was an important vote predictor.•The handling of the Covid-19 pandemic was an important predictor of the 2020 vote.•Nonpartisans with a high level of interest in politics comprise 13% of U.S. voters. |
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ISSN: | 0261-3794 1873-6890 0261-3794 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.electstud.2022.102548 |