EPISODE · Jul 29, 2020 · 41 MIN
How Donor Opinion Distorts American Parties
from The Science of Politics · host Niskanen Center
Billions of dollars in donations will flow to candidates this year. Citizens suspect all that money buys the donors' influence. But just how different are donors’ views in each party from those of citizens? Neil Malhotra finds that Republican donors are more conservative than Republican citizens on economic issues but Democratic donors are more liberal on social issues. Both parties’ donors are more pro-globalization than their voters. So which do the candidates follow: the donors or the voters? Jordan Kujala finds that donors make candidates more inconsistent with their electorates and increase polarization in both parties. Photo: Michael Vadon / CC BY-SA (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0)
What this episode covers
Billions of dollars in donations will flow to candidates this year. Citizens suspect all that money buys the donors' influence. But just how different are donors’ views in each party from those of citizens? Neil Malhotra finds that Republican donors are more conservative than Republican citizens on economic issues but Democratic donors are more liberal on social issues. Both parties’ donors are more pro-globalization than their voters. So which do the candidates follow: the donors or the voters? Jordan Kujala finds that donors make candidates more inconsistent with their electorates and increase polarization in both parties. Photo: Michael Vadon / CC BY-SA (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0)
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How Donor Opinion Distorts American Parties
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