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Red, Green, and Blue
The Partisan Divide on Environmental Issues

Explores the growing party divisions on the environment in the United States. It discusses how current party alignment might change.

David Karol (Author)

9781108716499, Cambridge University Press

Paperback / softback, published 25 April 2019

75 pages
23 x 15 x 0.5 cm, 0.1 kg

This Element explores the growing party divisions on the environment in the United States. It draws upon quantitative and qualitative data from several decades of national and state politics. The study contributes theory to the party position change literature, showing that interest groups change parties, but in turn are changed by them. In the 1970s the characteristics that predicted voters' attitudes on the environment also predicted legislators' votes. Yet as environmentalists and their opponents aligned with parties, officials had incentives to set their own views aside to represent new party constituencies. Influence flowed in both directions, however. Environmentalists were drawn to the Democrats as they confronted GOP-linked business lobbies. Environmentalists' resulting need to cooperate with other groups close to Democrats led them to change their positions. Although environmentalists were long unwelcoming to minorities, they embraced immigration reform, allied with unions on trade, and worked with civil rights lobbies and labor in battles over judicial nominations. The Element concludes with discussion of how the current party alignment on the environment might change.

1. Plan of the Volume
2. The Rise of Environmentalism in the United States
3. The Growing Party Divide on Environmentalism in Theoretical Context
4. U.S. Environmental Politics in Comparative Perspective
5. Charting the Partisan Divide on the Environment
6. How Environmentalism Has Changed
7. Environmentalism and the Politics of Party Coalitions
8. Prospects for Change
9. Conclusion.

Subject Areas: The environment [RN], Political parties [JPL], Political leaders & leadership [JPHL], Constitution: government & the state [JPHC]

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