Рет қаралды 46,393
Hoover Fellow, Elizabeth Elder, challenges the notion that voters engage with politics based on consistent policy preferences and, instead, shows that people make sense of politics through the lens of social group identities. Group factors such as race and gender provide citizens with emotional stakes and informational cues that guide their political decision-making, often leading to polarization. Elder explores how race strongly predicts public opinion and voting behavior, while gender, though not as strongly associated with political views, significantly impacts patterns of political engagement and representation.
Check Out More on Elections:
Watch "The Partisan Myth: How Voting Laws Actually Affect Election Results" with Justin Grimmer here:
www.policyed.org/policy-stories/partisan-myth-how-voting-laws-actually-affect-election-results/video
Watch "By Constitutional Design: The Electoral College" from John Yoo here:
www.policyed.org/unarchived/constitutional-design-electoral-college/video
Watch "Ranked-Choice Voting: Capturing Voter Preferences" from David Brady here:
www.policyed.org/intellection...
Be sure to visit The Hoover Institution at www.hoover.org/ and PolicyEd at www.policyed.org/
The opinions expressed on this website are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Hoover Institution or Stanford University. © 2024 by the Board of Trustees of Leland Stanford Junior University.