Strong Partisanship, Weak Parties & Social Media
The phrase “terminally online” is something of a punchline on the contemporary political internet, capturing the notion that too many of our political strategists and pundits are myopically focused on how social media, particularly Twitter, is going to react to the latest story of the day. There’s something to be said for that. After all, as is said so frequently as to be almost cliché, Twitter is not real life. But to ignore the effects that social media is having on our broader discourse, and what that might mean for politics more generally, is dangerously, and similarly, short-sighted. It was once the contention of many that the phenomenon we call “wokeness” was a peculiarity of college campuses and was destined to stay confined there. That, we have come to learn, was not the case. And while it is true that Twitter is not real life, it is also true that nearly every newsmaker – every celebrity, every elected figure serving in national government, every major athlete, even the freakin’ Pope – is on it. They think it matters, and if they think it matters, we might do well to consider the broader consequences that has for our politics.
Frenemies1 is a 2018 book by political scientist Jaime Settle exploring the effects of social media (specifically, Facebook) on our broader political environment. While Facebook is the explicit subject of study, the lessons of the book apply widely to the phenomenon of social media. Settle notes how those of us spending good chunks of time online have become more exposed, whether we wanted to or not, to the political opinions of others. Of course we always knew (so long as we were politically engaged, which not all of us were) the opinions of our elected officials – they had those big bold letters next to their names, after all – and we probably stumbled across the opinions of some of the rich and famous from time to time, if they were so inclined to be vocal on the subject of politics, as many frequently were and are. But, Settle says, now we’re exposed to a torrent of signals (“takes,” if you prefer) that consistently put politics at the forefront of our minds. Not everyone paid that much attention then, but if you spend any meaningful time on the internet, you are consuming political content.
“Who cares?” comes the inevitable rejoinder. So more people are paying attention to politics – that isn’t a bad thing, is it? And it isn’t a bad thing by definition. The problem is the broader incentive structure of social media, which encourages the construction of echo chambers and the constant reinforcement of what one already believes. This hardens opinion and pushes people further apart. One phenomenon of interest to political scientists in recent years has been what is known as “affective polarization,” which refers to polarization in how people feel about their party and the other party 2. The evidence is clear: Affective polarization has intensified, and many people are now motivated more by their hatred of the other party than they are by support for their own party.
You don’t have to take my word for it. Anyone who has spent any amount of time paying attention to politics can note the level of division. The environment is poisonous. Social media isn’t helping. It rewards trolling and “dunks” and preaching to the choir. And even though it’s true that Twitter is not real life, it has real effects when major opinion-makers spend hours on it every day. We’ve watched as press secretaries and federal judges have referenced online controversies, and it won’t do to say that this behavior will stay confined to the online sphere.
This is particularly dangerous because the Democratic and Republican parties have, as institutions, become so much weaker. Political scientist Julia Azari of Marquette University has written on this extensively 4. Lee noted the intense competition that exists between the modern Democratic and Republican Parties: Unlike in many other eras, the parties are so closely balanced that either one feels it has a chance to regain the majority within one or two elections. This tamps down the incentives for cooperation. For example, why settle for 50% or 75% when, after the next election, there’s a possibility that you can get 100%? It is not unlike the post-Reconstruction period, when the Democratic and Republican parties frequently competed for control of Congress (the presidency remained stubbornly out of reach for the Democrats, save Cleveland’s non-consecutive terms). We should not be eager to emulate this period.
But why have the parties become so weak? Here, disagreements become more acute, but consider the various congressional reforms of the 1970s that were meant to enhance transparency and may have instead, in one estimation, fostered dysfunction and polarization. Not all of the reforms were bad — Congress struck down the seniority rule for committee chairs to remove the ability of segregationist Southern Democrats to maintain a stranglehold on committees, for example – but on balance, short-term political winners proved to be disastrous for the institution and had effects that have reverberated throughout our politics.
The impetus for reform was noble: The Johnson and Nixon Administrations had obfuscated, at best, on a number of issues, and Americans were rightly growing weary of what they increasingly perceived as a corrupt government. However, the forces these reforms were meant to tamp down unleased others that were arguably worse. The first was the decision to put Congress on television; of course Congress had been on television on some occasions before the 1970s, but it did not become systematic until various reforms, including the Legislative Reorganization Act of 1970, and public pressure campaigns opened the door. C-SPAN launched in 1979 and the legislature has never been the same. It was political scientist David Mayhew who was among the first to describe one of the chief activities of a member of Congress to be “advertising:” building your brand, putting yourself out there, and so forth [1974. Congress: The Electoral Connection. Yale University Press.]. That incentive had always been there, but television altered the incentive structure: Favoring soundbites and moments more than cautious deliberation, politicians found purchase in making as much of a show as they could. They gesticulate wildly in empty chambers and badger witnesses under the bright spotlights of committee hearings. Much can be said of Congress since these reforms, but I do not believe one can argue convincingly that the quality of debate has improved.
The second set of reforms which I believe significantly weakened the parties were the various campaign finance laws of the early 1970s. Again, a noble goal: We do not wish for politicians bought by and in the pockets of the wealthy and well-connected to be making rules for the rest of us. But by restricting campaign donations so dramatically, politicians had to change the audiences to whom they appealed. No longer would it do to appeal to the median voter: you had to appeal to the true believer, the one who shells out $50 or $100 or maybe $1000 as an act of political expression. There is some significant research showing that these donors tend to be more politically extreme 5. It has certainly made the process more “democratic” in the strictest sense of the word, but it has also made it significantly more ideological and populist.
There is an obvious rejoinder to this argument: Without these campaign finance restrictions, the wealthy would simply buy our elections. But does anyone doubt that some people have more influence than others even in spite of contribution limits? Does anybody believe that these laws have leveled the playing field between the billionaire and the mechanic? The answer, of course, is no. But in our system, it is voters who make the decisions regarding who will serve in government. Money can buy campaign signs and advertisements; it can buy dinners with powerful people and ambassadorships. But the voters are the ones who choose. Jeb Bush’s millions did him no good. Neither did Mitt Romney’s, nor Hillary Clinton’s, nor whoever’s. Money can only take you so far.
Which brings me to the third reform which has disempowered the parties: primary reforms. Voters choose virtually all major party candidates when it comes to elections to national office (and most elections to state office, for that matter). This is certainly more “democratic” than the old smoke-filled rooms, but is it necessarily better for a functioning government? Candidates in this social media-driven environment seek virality. They seem less leaders than followers, looking to see which way the mob is moving and rushing to get in front. Has it led to better candidates? Is our government more functional?
If one is inclined to believe that disempowering the parties is good because the parties were corrupt, they might have a compelling argument. The parties were frequently corrupt. But, as often happens in politics, we have swung to the other extreme and neutered the ability of parties to function effectively at all. And we see the results: Partisanship has not dissipated, and polarization has gotten worse, not better. The reforms have failed to achieve their stated objectives. “Modern democracy is unthinkable save in terms of parties,” wrote E.E. Schattschneider in the early 1940s 6. And it is. For all the negatives of partisanship, it also provides voters with incredibly valuable cues and helps them make sense of the issues of the day – or at least parties do this when they are healthy. Today, they are anything but.
Power abhors a vacuum, as they say. Social media has filled it. In the immediate term, this portends ill for our politics.
- 2018. Frenemies: How Social Media Polarizes America. Cambridge University Press.
- See, e.g., Shanto Iyengar and Sean J. Westwood. 2015. “Fear and Loathing Across Party Lines: New Evidence on Group Polarization.” American Journal of Political Science 59(3):690-707.
- See, e.g., “Weak parties and strong partisanship are a bad combination”. There is much debate about what caused this institutional weakness, but it has presented something of a curious puzzle where we have voters who are intensely partisan (even if it is mostly anti-partisan, in that they are voting more against the Democrats or Republicans rather than for them), but professional party organizations that are relatively powerless. Or, as Professor Azari has succinctly put it, we have “weak parties” but “strong partisanship.” This has serious consequences: On the one hand, party leaders in Congress, for example, maintain a near iron grip over their caucuses. At the same time, neither party has proven to be able to withstand populist insurgencies, and the tendency of voters in both parties to nominate candidates well to the left or right of the median voter in the United States has often left voters with less-than-ideal options and Democratic and Republican leaders frustrated. This frustration leads to marginalization of the other party, which compounds the misgivings of voters and leads them to elect ever-more-extreme candidates. “Compromise” and “bipartisanship” become dirty words. To collaborate is to surrender.
And it’s no wonder. Frances Lee’s 2016 book, Insecure Majorities, is instructive here 32016. Insecure Majorities: Congress and the Perpetual Campaign. University of Chicago Press.
- See, e.g., Richard H. Pildes. 2020. “Participation and Polarization.” Journal of Constitutional Law 22(2):341-408.
- 1942. Party Government. Rinehart & Company.
Good column! Your second point has one glaring hole, though: Citizens’ United. The barn doors have been blown off of campaign fundraising regulation and, uh, things certainly haven’t become better since. It turns out that those who care little about their own personal finances may also be those who care little about keeping a functioning society. Putting every candidate down to dogcatcher in the same campaign funding arms race means having to farm those same people for cash, and now you’re suddenly looking at EV mandates or having $2 billion slapfights with Disney World.
And I’d probably take a minor quibble with the first part as news media, and now social media, means you don’t need the chamber lectern to get your fifteen minutes plus of fame. Just ask the guy who got deplatformed from Twitter only to have his Truth Social blatherings still plastered across my Twitter feed.Report
I think that significantly overstates the importance of the Citizens United decision. It didn’t outlaw contribution limits but restrictions on independent spending.Report
The parties are also weak because they lack the official status you see in a lot of countries outside America. In the UK, people need to be dues paying members to vote in various conferences and they attend conferences. This is the closest the U.K. gets to primaries and look like conventions but are different. There are also official youth wings that are designed for getting people in the ranks and up the organization.
Federalism and the fact that we have 50 state governments with their own power also make parties weaker because the state parties are also somewhat independent of a large scheme. Political parties in the rest of the world are more centralized because the government overall is more centralized. Here, I think you see more differences in the Democratic organizations in various states than the Republican ones. Democrats in different states need different tactics and policies to win. A good example here is Fetterman. He is a great candidate for Pennsylvania but I’m skeptical of his ability to win a state-wide primary in California despite how blue the state is. Not because of his politics but because California is more Democratic and more diverse than Pennsylvania, we don’t need a state-wide candidate that looks like Fetterman to appeal. That being said, I could see running a Fetterman type in the Central Valley for a congressional seat. Likewise, AOC and Spanberger need to do different things to win their districts.Report
The dismissing of the “very online” is double-edged sword. On the one hand, it was clear that Biden was not a preferred candidate for the very online. He was seen as too old and too moderate/conservative. But he won the nomination easily and it caught a lot of the very online by surprise. A lot of them came up with excuses for Biden’s support among black Americans like “Black people know how bad whites can be” and they just could not recognize that Black people might just like Biden and saw him as a loyal aide-de-camp to the first Black President. In popular parlance, this was a big freakin deal to them. An older white guy showing deference and support to a younger Black President without fail.
That being said, I think a lot of the mainstream media likes to insult the very online because it is a threat to their interests. “Socially liberal but economically conservative” is one of the least numerous positions in American politics but it punches above its weight because people with this position have a good amount of money and are over represented by pompously pontificating pundits. Thomas Freidman and co. would like nothing more than Davos being the bee’s knees forever and ever and for the Democratic Party to stick to Clinton’s economic policies from 1996-1998. Twitter represents a more economically liberal/redistributionist viewpoint than they are comfortable with and the popularity of Biden’s student debt relief and reform shows. Pundits and Republicans think this is horrible and will backfire. All the evidence and polling so far is too the contrary and this makes the corporate-careerist consultant types nervous.
https://www.brookings.edu/blog/fixgov/2022/09/06/do-americans-support-president-bidens-student-loan-plan/Report
Nice essay.
HHH was talking about Vince McMahon moving on in a podcast the other day and shared an analogy of what it’s like picking the storylines.
It’s not about good versus bad, he said. Two people can both have very good ideas but you can’t do both of them. It’s not good versus bad, it’s chocolate versus vanilla. So you shouldn’t see the other guy’s ideas being picked as a criticism of your idea. Your idea wasn’t bad! We’re just eating chocolate instead of vanilla! It’s all ice cream!
But we’ve evolved away from that to a Manichean interpretation of anything. Every choice must be the Right Choice. Everyone who doesn’t agree with us is giving aid and comfort to the enemy. If a plan is chosen and it does not work? That is because it didn’t have enough support from the people undercutting it. The hoarders, the wreckers, the lazy quiet quitters.
No, it’s not because some stuff just doesn’t work or doesn’t scale… it’s because of sabotage.
And we need to get back to a place where we can figure out what works and that there are multiple things that can work and picking this plan instead of that plan is just picking one of two plans that might work. It’s picking a flavor. It’s not picking a winner.Report
So your argument, if I’ve got it right, is that we should hide the actual legislating from the public, but let the wealthy spend as much as possible on the spectacle of politics while campaigning? I feel like this partially diagnosis the disease (the spectacle), but then chooses to treat it amplifying the disease to the point that it will inevitably kill the host.Report