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Partisan Orientations over the Long Haul: Results from the Three-Wave Political Socialization Panel Study
400
Citations
24
References
1984
Year
Long HaulVoting ChoiceElection ForecastingPolitical AttitudesPolitical ProcessYounger GenerationPublic OpinionPolitical PolarizationPolitical BehaviorPartisan OrientationsPolitical PartiesPolitical CognitionPolitical CompetitionPolitical ScienceSocial SciencesVolatile Voting Behavior
The present study examines the dynamics of partisanship and voting behavior by utilizing national survey panel data gathered in 1965, 1973, and 1982 from two strategically situated generations—members of the high school senior class of 1965 and their parents. At the aggregate level, generational effects appeared in the persistently weaker partisan attachments of the younger generation. At the individual level, strong effects based on experience and habituation appeared in the remarkable gains occurring in the stability of partisan and other orientations among the young as they aged from their mid-20s to their mid-30s. Dynamic modeling of the relationship between partisanship and voting choice demonstrated that the younger voters had stabilized at an overall weaker level of partisanship, leading to more volatile voting behavior which, in turn, failed to provide the consistent reinforcement needed to intensify preexisting partisan leanings.
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