UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Experts have documented that political polarization is intensifying in the United States. However, a Penn State sociologist now suggests that this separation isn’t just more intense, but it is also growing broader, coagulating into an ideological slick of opinions.
In the study of data from a national opinion survey, Daniel DellaPosta, assistant professor of sociology and social data analytics, said that opinions on many seemingly unconnected political issues — and even non-political issues — have become increasingly correlated ideologically.
As an example of this division, DellaPosta said that, in the past, people could have disagreed on abortion rights, but they may have still agreed on gun control or tax rates. Now agreement on those unconnected issues have become more tightly bound with the person’s ideology.
“This study represents a different structural element of polarization, which is how different opinions and beliefs are related to one another in the population at large,” said DellaPosta.” This builds on a long line of work, often called opinion alignment.”
More troubling, added DellaPosta, who is also an affiliate of the Institute for Computational and Data Sciences (ICDS), there is a drop in opinions that people from opposing groups could agree on — often referred to as cross-cutting alignments — which may mean there is less room for compromise and agreement.
“People who have studied polarization in the past have often concluded that polarization has increased in some ways, but it is not occurring in the opinions in the population as a whole — and that’s been a somewhat comforting thought,” said DellaPosta. “In a sense, this study provides a less hopeful conclusion because it suggests that it’s not just that, for example, political parties have become more extreme, but that polarization has happened in the population itself.”
According to DellaPosta, the results may show that there is a widening gap in political divisions.
“Political divisions have become broader and it seems that these divisions have come to incorporate much more and include opinions that were once not involved,” said DellaPosta.