- Title
- Why did the Democrats lose the South? Bringing new data to an old debate
- Author(s)
- Ilyana Kuziemko Ilyana Kuziemko (Princeton University)
- Ebonya Washington Ebonya Washington (Yale University)
- Abstract
- A long-standing debate in political economy is whether voters are driven primarily by economic self-interest or by less pecuniary motives such as ethnocentrism. Using newly available data, we reexamine one of the largest partisan shifts in a modern democracy: Southern whites' exodus from the Democratic Party, concentrated in the 1960s. Combining high-frequency survey data and textual newspaper analysis, we show that defection among racially conservative whites explains all (three-fourths) of the large decline in white Southern Democratic identification between 1958 and 1980 (2000). Racial attitudes also predict whites' partisan shifts earlier in the century. Relative to recent work, we find a much larger role for racial views and essentially no role for income growth or (non-race-related) policy preferences in explaining why Democrats "lost" the South.
- Creation Date
- 2016-09
- Section URL ID
- Paper Number
- 2016-1
- URL
- https://scholar.princeton.edu/sites/default/files/kuziemko/files/south_dems_5sept2016.pdf
- File Function
- Jel
- D72, H23, J15, N92
- Keyword(s)
- U.S., Northern America, Democracy, Political, Race, Racial, Voter
- Suppress
- false
- Series
- 13