Sociological Science (Aug 2017)

Social Class and Party Identification During the Clinton, Bush, and Obama Presidencies

  • Stephen L. Morgan,
  • Jiwon Lee

DOI
https://doi.org/10.15195/v4.a16
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 16
pp. 394 – 423

Abstract

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Through an analysis of the 1994 through 2016 General Social Surveys, this article demonstrates that a substantial proportion of eligible voters within the working class turned away from solid identification with either the Democratic Party or the Republican Party during the Obama presidency. Even before the 2016 election cycle commenced, conditions were uncharacteristically propitious for a Republican candidate who could appeal to prospective voters in the working class, especially those who had not voted in recent presidential elections but could be mobilized to vote. These findings support the contested position that variation in party identification is a genuine leading indicator of electoral outcomes and perhaps also, in this case, of party realignment.

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