Read an Excerpt from “Partisan Nation: The Dangerous New Logic of American Politics in a Nationalized Era” by Paul Pierson and Eric Schickler
As Americans digest the first—and possibly last—Presidential Debate, many questions now loom even larger than before concerning the future of American democracy. Today’s politics reflect one of the most polarized ideological landscapes in our nation’s history—one where national politics subsume and transform local politics. The result: American democracy finds itself increasingly threatened. But how did we get here?
In Partisan Nation, Paul Pierson and Eric Schickler chart how America’s democratic crisis is rooted in a dangerous mismatch between our Constitution and today’s nationalized partisan politics. In this excerpt from the book, the authors discuss how American politics became so fractured and what this means for future governance and democracy.
Democrats and Republicans may not agree on much, but for the past two decades, they have regularly shared one very important assumption: a victory by the other party’s candidates would constitute a grave threat to the future of their country. Some Republicans called 2016 the “Flight 93” election—implying that terrorists were flying the plane and it was time to storm the cockpit. Many Democrats viewed Donald Trump’s 2020 bid for reelection in similar terms. There have been elections in earlier eras where much the same could be said—but never before has there been such a long—and intensifying—run of presidential contests in which so many participants regarded the stakes as existential. This book aims to understand this critical transformation—and its implications for the future of the American political system.
Partisan rancor has become a defining feature of American politics. Growing numbers regard the other party with hostility and fear. Party elites are more polarized still. In Washington and many state capitals, politics has devolved into a zerosum conflict increasingly detached from longstanding norms and increasingly focused on sustaining partisan advantage. Moreover, party polarization has not simply endured; it has deepened. Aside from a brief post9/11 interlude, the intensity of these divisions has been building for more than four decades. Even such massive crises as the Great Recession of 2008–9 and the COVID19 pandemic of 2020–22 failed to disrupt it.
Political scientists and journalists have devoted enormous effort to understanding both the sources of partisan polarization and the many ways in which it shapes the daytoday behavior of ordinary citizens, election outcomes, and governance. But the intensity and durability of current divisions raise deeper questions. America’s constitutional system was not built for this. The Framers clearly hoped that the institutions they designed would prevent intense and durable partisan divisions, and political analysts long believed the Constitution had in fact become a solid bulwark against it. Today, however, we need to ask: Can our constitutional order function effectively amid this polarized politics? Can it even survive?
Polarization itself is not necessarily a threat to America’s constitutional democracy. American politics has been polarized in earlier periods, and core institutions emerged largely unscathed, or even strengthened, in its aftermath. Indeed, many commentators have drawn solace from these precedents.
But today’s polarization is quite distinctive. Precisely because it is different it has become selfreinforcing—increasingly difficult to dislodge and tending toward even greater intensification. Because today’s polarization is so different, it represents an unprecedented challenge to our constitutional system.
The nationalization of political conflict is at the heart of today’s dynamics. In past polarized eras, national parties operated within an altogether different political context. Key features—the character of state parties, the nature of group organizations and demands, and the structure of the press—acted as effective countervailing mechanisms against the risk of fierce and sustained polarization. Within a decentralized federal polity, these features created openings for major factional divisions, ultimately disrupting party lines. Repeatedly, the precise dynamic that James Madison famously expected the nation’s fragmented institutional structure to encourage emerged. Crosscutting cleavages limited both the intensity and durability of polarizing forces.
Today’s polarization, by contrast, has followed a different path. It emerged within a polity that was rapidly nationalizing, giving rise to new organizations and transforming existing ones. Nationalization created new relationships, balances of political power, and incentives. These changes, in turn, have further intensified divisions between the parties, their supporting coalitions, and voters. And the consolidation of this nationalized and polarized polity undercut many of the traditional sources of depolarization that worked in the past.
While we use the language of polarization it has an unfortunate limitation; it elicits images of symmetry. Speaking of polarization can be taken to imply that the two parties are mirror images of each other, that they have both moved equally—and in similar ways—away from centrism and moderation. Such a depiction may seem a useful simplification (and one that helpfully casts the observer in a seemingly neutral position). But it is simply false. Yes, the new context of nationalization has transformed both parties in some respects that are similar. Both coalitions have become more internally homogeneous and distinct from each other. Each faces growing incentives to operate as a team, both within and across the many venues of our politics. Both parties feel an increasing pull from their electoral base.
Yet the parties are not mirror images. They are different coalitions. They have different political aspirations. They have different political strengths and weaknesses—many of them powerfully shaped by the nation’s peculiar Constitution. Broad changes in American society, including dramatic changes in media and equally dramatic changes in the nation’s demographics, affect the two-party coalitions very differently.
The selfreinforcing dynamics we describe are particularly intense in the Republican Party, and these developments in the GOP are particularly damaging to the prospects for effective governance and democratic stability. They have encouraged Republican Party members and constituencies to support actions that escalate perceptions of partisan threat and endanger prior shared understandings of democratic governance. While the forces that would previously have counseled compromise and forbearance have weakened on the left, they have been eviscerated on the right.
In the chapters that follow, we elaborate on the sources of the stark asymmetry between the parties, focusing on differences in their coalitions, agendas, and media environments. A combination of unfavorable demographic change and a favorable skew of American political institutions (the Senate, the Supreme Court, and state legislative maps) present Republican elites with a particularly volatile combination of threat and opportunity. Republican politicians now face strong incentives to behave in ways that both impede governance and threaten the stability of American democracy. Critically, nationalized polarization has severely weakened the traditional institutional and electoral checks on such behavior. The Constitution was simply not designed to meet the challenges we now face. In fact, in many respects it magnifies vulnerabilities to dysfunctional governance and democratic backsliding. As this brief synopsis suggests, we ground our analysis in historical inquiry. We are by no means the first to use historical evidence to analyze contemporary polarization. Indeed, many studies of polarization begin with a simple graph charting congressional rollcall voting patterns over time to show that Democrats and Republicans have grown much further apart in their voting behavior in recent decades. These data demonstrate that contemporary divisions exceed even those in the late nineteenth century, which had until recently been viewed as the era with the deepest party polarization in American history. Many analysts concerned about the high level of polarization evident today have drawn comfort from their observation that polarization between the two parties, at least when it comes to voting in Congress, has been common in American history. If anything, the period of low polarization from the 1930s–70s was the anomaly. From this standpoint, worry about the intense divisions we observe today is overstated.
Yet these measures of polarization levels only take us so far. They reveal how differently Democrats and Republicans vote in Congress, but that does not tell us whether the parties are fighting about big or small policy issues, how far disagreement extends beyond the subjects of those rollcall votes, or the degree of animus between the parties. Democrats and Republicans can vote in diametrically opposed ways without viewing the other side as fundamentally illegitimate. Ideological “scores” do not tell us whether the strategies used by one or both parties seek to undermine basic democratic values. Put simply, these measures offer a picture of just one form of behavioral differences.
Others have turned to history as a source of analogies for today’s politics. The pitched battles between Jeffersonians and Federalists in the early years of the republic, the violent confrontations of the Civil War era, and the conflicts over industrial development and financial policy in the 1890s and early 1900s provide valuable lessons for what polarized politics look like in practice. Yet these comparisons are also limited in important ways. In particular, historical analogies tend to rely on the assumption that the political context was sufficiently similar across time. If, say, the emergence of a new, crosscutting issue undermined polarization in the past, one might expect something similar to happen now. In fact, we argue, the contexts are so different that these analogies are forced and misleading. Unfortunately, like measures of rollcall votes, simple reliance on historical analogies runs the risk of normalizing today’s political dynamics.
Our approach is different. We look at considerable stretches of time during periods identified as highly polarized, laying out the development of both polarization and subsequent depolarization. Adopting a “thicker” view of the relevant institutions that incorporate mass media, the organization of interests, and the structure of parties, we pay particular attention to the political mechanisms that have generally limited the scope and durability of polarization in these eras. These mechanisms, we argue, were based upon both the Constitution itself and a broader institutional context which once allowed decentralizing forces to flourish but no longer does. We draw a crucial distinction between the Constitution—the formal institutions of American government—and constitutional orders, which include both the Constitution and the nature of key mediating institutions.
We turn to history, in short, both to consider the rise and fall of polarization in prior eras and to make clear how different the contemporary challenge is from its predecessors. It is different because the constitutional order is different, even as the Constitution itself has remained essentially unchanged.
Our “thicker” view allows us to explore crucial differences between the con temporary parties, to deepen our understanding of the relationship between elite and masslevel politics, to clarify why contemporary polarization is so durable and intense, and to highlight poorly understood fragilities of the American political system.
Paul Pierson is the John Gross Distinguished Professor of Political Science at the University of California, Berkeley, and director of the Berkeley Economy and Society Initiative. He is the author or coauthor of six books, including Winner-Take-All Politics, Let Them Eat Tweets, and Politics in Time.
Eric Schickler is the Jeffrey & Ashley McDermott Professor of Political Science at the University of California, Berkeley. He is the author or coauthor of seven books, including Racial Realignment, Investigating the President, and Filibuster.
Partisan Nation is available now. Use code UCPNEW to purchase the book for 30% off on our website.