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How Politicians Polarize: Political Representation in an Age of Negative Partisanship: Chicago Studies in American Politics

Autor Mia Costa
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 24 mar 2025
A fresh examination of political representation in an era of negative partisanship.
What does representation look like when politicians focus on "othering" the opposing party rather than the policy interests of their constituents? How do voters react to negative partisan rhetoric? And is policy responsiveness still the cornerstone of American representative democracy?
In How Politicians Polarize, Mia Costa draws on survey experiments, analysis of congressional newsletters and tweets, and data on fundraising and media coverage to examine how and why politicians rely so often on negative partisan attacks. Costa shows that most Americans do not like negative rhetoric, and politicians know this. Nonetheless, these kinds of attacks can reap powerful rewards from national media, donors, and party elites. Costa’s findings challenge the popular notion that Americans are motivated more by their partisan identities than by policy representation. Her research illuminates how the political ecosystem rewards negative representation and how this affects the quality of American democracy.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780226838946
ISBN-10: 0226838943
Pagini: 288
Ilustrații: 55 halftones, 35 line drawings, 14 tables
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Ediția:First Edition
Editura: University of Chicago Press
Colecția University of Chicago Press
Seria Chicago Studies in American Politics


Notă biografică

Mia Costa is assistant professor in the Department of Government at Dartmouth College, where she is also a faculty associate in the Program in Quantitative Social Science. She has published articles in the American Journal of Political Science, Politics & Gender, Political Research Quarterly, and Political Behavior, among others.

Cuprins

Chapter 1. How Politicians Polarize
Chapter 2. Reinterpreting Representation for an “Us versus Them” Politics
Chapter 3. Partisanship and Policy in Elite Communication
Chapter 4. How Negative Representation Diminishes Substantive Representation
Chapter 5. Negative Partisanship as an Electoral Strategy
Chapter 6. The Hidden Layer of Polarization: Elite Animosity
Chapter 7. Reaping the Rewards: Media, Money, and Influence
Chapter 8. Americans Don’t Like Negative Representation
Chapter 9. Selective Tolerance: The Subgroups That Turn a Blind Eye
Chapter 10. The Perception Gap
Chapter 11. The Race to the Bottom (and the Way Back Up)

Acknowledgments
Appendixes

Appendix to Chapter 3
Appendix to Chapter 4
Appendix to Chapter 7
Appendix to Chapter 8
Appendix to Chapter 9
Notes
References
Index

Recenzii

How Politicians Polarize reveals a divide between what politicians do and what people truly want. While Americans themselves reject animosity, Costa shows the process by which politicians are nevertheless rewarded for negative attacks. Her multi-method account offers both assurance that Americans disdain this 'othering' but also a dark warning for how negative representation becomes a dominant strain within US politics.”

How Politicians Polarize reveals how the modern political rhetoric of us versus them, of this group against that group, shapes how we are represented. Negative partisanship has been the hallmark of American politics over the first three decades of the twenty-first century. Costa shows us why and how our representatives create and sustain that as a matter of political strategy, despite voters wanting to hear more about what representatives will do to address real problems. A must-read.”

How Politicians Polarize offers a path-breaking shift in our understanding of representation. It introduces negative representation: when elites focus on opposing the other party rather than advancing policy on behalf of their constituents. Costa’s wide-ranging examination reveals how this pernicious practice stems, not from voters’ preferences, but rather from the media ecosystem, non-competitive elections, progressively ambitious politicians, and partisan misperceptions. Costa offers remarkable insight in explaining that a ‘way out’ would be privileging voters’ desires over perceived systemic incentives.”