America’s electorate is increasingly polarized along partisan lines about voting by mail during the COVID-19 crisis
Edited by Douglas S. Massey, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, and approved August 24, 2020 (received for review April 24, 2020)
Abstract
Are voters as polarized as political leaders when it comes to their preferences about how to cast their ballots in November 2020 and their policy positions on how elections should be run in light of the COVID-19 outbreak? Prior research has shown little party divide on voting by mail, with nearly equal percentages of voters in both parties choosing to vote this way where it is an option. Has a divide opened up this year in how voters aligned with the Democratic and Republican parties prefer to cast a ballot? We address these questions with two nationally diverse, online surveys fielded from April 8 to 10 and June 11 to 13, of 5,612 and 5,818 eligible voters, respectively, with an embedded experiment providing treated respondents with scientific projections about the COVID-19 outbreak. We find a nearly 10 percentage point difference between Democrats and Republicans in their preference for voting by mail in April, which had doubled in size to nearly 20 percentage points in June. This partisan gap is wider still for those exposed to scientific projections about the pandemic. We also find that support for national legislation requiring states to offer no-excuse absentee ballots has emerged as an increasingly polarized issue.
Data Availability
Survey results data have been deposited in Dataverse (13).
Acknowledgments
We are grateful for the guidance provided by Rick Hasen, J. Morgan Kousser, Paul Gronke, and Bonnie N. Kaiser and to the University of California Office of the President’s Multicampus Research Program for providing funding for the New Electorate Project, Grant MRP-17-454899.
References
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M. Lockhart, S. J. Hill, J. Merolla, M. Romero, T. Kousser, Data from “Replication data for: America's electorate is increasingly polarized along partisan lines about voting by mail during the COVID-19 crisis.” Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/GF0XJA. Deposited 18 August 2020.
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Copyright
Copyright © 2020 the Author(s). Published by PNAS. This open access article is distributed under Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0 (CC BY).
Data Availability
Survey results data have been deposited in Dataverse (13).
Submission history
Published online: September 22, 2020
Published in issue: October 6, 2020
Keywords
Acknowledgments
We are grateful for the guidance provided by Rick Hasen, J. Morgan Kousser, Paul Gronke, and Bonnie N. Kaiser and to the University of California Office of the President’s Multicampus Research Program for providing funding for the New Electorate Project, Grant MRP-17-454899.
Authors
Competing Interests
The authors declare no competing interest.
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