Publication | Open Access
Why Did the Democrats Lose the South? Bringing New Data to an Old Debate
181
Citations
35
References
2018
Year
Southern WhitesPolitical ProcessPolitical PolarizationPolitical BehaviorPublic ChoiceSocial SciencesPolitical EquilibriumAfrican American StudiesPolitical EconomyPolitical CommunicationAmerican PoliticsPublic PolicyOld DebatePolitical CompetitionBlack PoliticsConservative WhitesPolitical AttitudesNew DataPolitical PartiesPolitical Science
A long-standing debate in political economy is whether voters are driven primarily by economic self-interest or by less pecuniary motives like ethnocentrism. Using newly available data, we reexamine one of the largest partisan shifts in a modern democracy: Southern whites' exodus from the Democratic Party. We show that defection among racially conservative whites explains the entire decline from 1958 to 1980. Racial attitudes also predict whites' earlier partisan shifts. 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. (JEL D72, J15, N42)
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