The Impact of Increased Political Polarization

As I write this, the House Intelligence Committee has voted to adopt the committee’s Impeachment Inquiry Report along strict party lines. All 13 Democrats on the committee voted “Yes”; all nine Republican committee members voted “No.” This party-line split is neither unusual nor unpredictable, but reflects the deep partisanship that is one of the defining aspects of our American society today.

I use the words “American society” rather than “American politics” here on purpose. We know that personal partisan identity affects one’s views on a wide variety of policy issues, and, of course, partisanship is the defining determinant of people’s views of their political leaders. But recent Gallup analyses show just how much our political identity today is a part of our views of a wide variety of other aspects of life, which often are not directly related to politics. CONT.

Frank Newport, Gallup