Let's Find Common Ground - Divided We Stand? What Americans Really Think About Politics
Episode Date: April 27, 2023It’s often said that America is as politically divided as it has ever been. In this week’s show we dive into the data from two different groups that study American attitudes. What they discovered ...challenges some of our assumptions about the current state of US politics, and offers us a sense of context missing from noisy ‘us versus them’ type arguments. John Geer of Vanderbilt University discusses the latest findings from Vanderbilt’s Unity Index, which tracks Americans’ trust in institutions and democracy. Kate Carney, chief of staff at More in Common in Washington DC, talks about the group’s ‘Speaking to the Exhausted Majority’ report. Both reports are examples of deep research into the state of American public opinion and where common ground may lie. We discuss the extent to which US democracy is under threat, who really makes up the ‘exhausted majority’ of American voters, and what liberals and conservatives get wrong about the other side. Please tell us what you think! Share your feedback in this short survey. For every survey completed we’ll plant 5 trees.  Common Ground Podcast Feedback Survey (qualtrics.com)
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This time we look at two recent reports about what people really think about the state of American democracy and our part in it.
It turns out most of us are thoroughly fed up.
So if you're part of this exhaustive majority who may not see their views represented in what we call the wings,
kind of the more polarizing opposite ends of the political spectrum, and it's a pretty toxic fight in there,
you don't have a lot of incentive to want to jump into that.
That's a pretty exhausting space to be in.
This is Let's Find Common Ground.
I'm Richard Davies.
And I'm Ashleen Lentite.
We're about to dive into some data that will confirm a few of our suspicions
about the state of our democracy
and challenge others. And we're doing this through the insights of two guests.
John Geer is professor of political science at Vanderbilt University,
and manager of the Vanderbilt project on unity and democracy.
Kate Karney is chief of staff at Morin Common,
which works to address the underlying causes
of polarization and aims to build a more united society.
John Geir and Kate Cardney, thanks so much for joining us on Let's Find Common Ground.
Happy to be here.
Yeah, great to be here.
Thank you.
So, John, let's start with you.
Both of your organizations have been sharing some valuable insights about the state of public opinion.
And it's often said in the media and elsewhere that we're really divided.
In fact, more so now than at any time in living memory.
Based on what you know, it is that true.
If the constraint is within living memory, the answer is yes. You know we can see poll after poll showing huge amounts of polarization. The parties have
become to use a recent political scientists term calcified in their
partisanship. We're very much divided on key cultural issues. That division has
grown over the last 30 to 40 years. I mean, if you take a longer look at American history
and you want to go back to the 19th century,
yes, you'd find more polarization during the time
leading up to the Civil War and then after the Civil War.
But right now we're really very, very divided
and not only divided, but equally divided.
That is that both those on the left
and those on the right both see paths to
victory. Kate? Yeah I think our data would show that there is at least a
perception that we are really divided right now. We've asked Americans words
that they would use to describe our country and the number one word chosen is
divided 61%. The next word is chaotic, 37%. So we get not really positive words,
and I think to echo John,
that we're also more likely to see
our political opponents as enemies,
really than as just Americans that we happen
to maybe disagree with.
John, the Vanderbilt Unity Index
has been tracking Americans' views,
not on the issues so much,
but on questions of trust in our political institutions.
Can you share a few of the key findings with us?
Sure, so the Unity Index, which now we've gotten, we've updated it,
and we can get it back to the early 1960s, is an effort to capture people's trust institutions,
people's trust in each other.
We're also trying to capture extreme measures and opinion.
That is not, let's say you disapprove of President Biden.
What we really want to know is how many people are strongly disapproved.
And how many people aren't conservative or liberal,
but are extremely conservative, extremely liberal.
And so we put this all together in an index,
and not surprisingly, which gives me some confidence
that we're measuring something real, is that the amount of polarization, let's say the
amount of unity has been on the decline since the 1960s and it continues to go into decline.
Certainly, a tipping point was 1994, which makes sense.
That was contract with American Newt Gingrich.
And it continues.
And the low point, again, which should come as no surprises
during the presidency of Donald Trump,
we have seen a slight uptick during the time of Biden,
not a huge uptick, but some uptick.
Also, I think it's important to note
that the country has never been super unified by this measure.
That is we've always had our disagreements.
But that's of course the stuff of politics.
It's the stuff of the democracy.
What a democracy is designed to do is develop a set of institutions that figure out a way
to adjudicate our differences and develop policies.
And so, disagreement is part and parcel of democracy, and we certainly see that in the index.
More in common, the group that you work with Kate,
published research on the electorate that used the term the Exhausted Majority.
In what ways are many of us exhausted with politics?
So again, this term is from a report called Hidden Tribes,
one of our foundational reports, and in that we collected views of over 8,000 Americans to
about understand their basic values, beliefs, and ways that they're influenced by
how they see the world. And that exhaustive majority we found really makes up
two-thirds of Americans. And you're united not necessarily because they have
centrists or similar views on issues or policy,
but really because when they're fed up with polarization
in our country, they're often forgotten or not heard
about in our public discourse.
Many are so frustrated, exhausted,
that they've checked out completely or not willing to engage
in our political conversations.
They're also flexible in their views
and not as likely to maybe be as ideologically concrete
in what they think
and they believe that we can find common ground.
And I think in your question of what many ways are we exhausted or this group is exhausted
and it's just conflict for many of us is exhausting.
And we've really defined or created this environment for politics as defined by conflict and division
and toxic and really tense division where we hear again the loudest most divisive voices points of views are represented.
So if you're part of this exhaustive majority who may not see their views represented in
what we call the wings that kind of the more polarizing opposite ends of the political
spectrum and it's a pretty toxic fight in there.
You don't have a lot of incentive to want to jump into that.
That's a pretty exhausting space to be in.
But it's also this division is seeping into, you know, several different aspects of our lives,
which can be really, really challenging to navigate our families or faith communities,
places of work, neighborhoods. It's not just maybe the political arena that we might have been
at one point in time. And this exhausted majority, about two-thirds of Americans, you say,
not necessarily people in the political middle, right? Yeah, so we kind of have
folks along the range of the political spectrum. So those tribes are traditional
liberals, passive liberals. So folks that may not be as engaged, but if push, they
may lean more towards the left, politically disengaged folks that just really
aren't part of the process. That's about 26% of Americans, so kind of a really large percentage of Americans.
And then moderates are more kind of on the center right into this spectrum.
Are a lot of Americans less hopeful than they were, you know, five, 10, 20 years ago?
John, do you want to go?
Well, it's hard to know because the reason I say it's hard to know is that the kinds of questions
we're asking now in the Kates organizations asking now. We weren't asking 10 to 15 years ago,
because we weren't in that state of affairs. We did a national poll recently at the Unity
Project where we ask people, do you think we have the ability to get through our tough
problems? Are you optimistic about the future?
And about 60% of the respondents indicated they were optimistic.
Now, whether that's a higher or low number,
I'm not sure what it is because we don't have a baseline to compare it to.
But I do think that, let me put it this way,
the mag as segment of the electorate,
I do think looks at politics in a very, very different kind of way. And partly
because they reject evidence, in many cases, you know, they are election deniers, despite
the fact there's no evidence for it, they think about politics in a very different kind of
way than those even on the left. I mean, again, both sides have extreme views, but, you know,
we did a poll where we asked people Americans a national sample
whether they thought Joe Biden or Vladimir Putin was a better president. 52% of the
mega identifiers think Putin is a better president than Biden.
Wow. 52%. I mean, that's just staggering. Now, that's hyperbole to some degree,
but if you take the mainstream republicans that
portion gets under thirty percent
so
it you know we do have this tribalism but the mag heights
as i you know you might call them really do think about politics differently
they're in their own media bubble
they believe things that we know empirically aren't necessarily true
and how do we try to get them out of there because
you know let's say you have somebody who's a conservative Republican,
a Liz Cheney. You know, Liz Cheney is not somebody who's a
deadifying with the maggots. She might not agree with a lot of people, members of the Democratic
Party on policy issues, but they all believe in the constitution at least. They all believe in
separation of powers. They all believe that the courts have a certain kind of role. And that's just not true for this maggot group. And that group
really does does concern me because democracy to work requires that we agree upon the evidence.
It's kind of like a court of law. There's a body of evidence that both sides have to evaluate
and they try to put one spin on one way and put another spin on the other. But you can't
just bring in things or make things up, it gets thrown out.
Well, what's going on with this group is they're trying to make things up, so to speak.
That's a big problem, I think.
But to push back a little bit, critics of the left, the hard left of the Democratic Party would say,
well, they're trying to pack the court by increasing the number of Supreme Court justices,
and they're trying to have a national takeover of elections, which have traditionally been run by states and counties across the country.
Do they have a point?
Well, those policies are certainly extreme, and I'm not necessarily going to endorse them one way or the other,
but at least they're still based on a set of evidence and the operation of the Constitution.
So one can quibble with what Mitch McConnell did in regards to making sure the court had
a lot of conservative justices when the opportunities arose, both blocking Merrick Arlen, for example,
and then making sure that Coney Barrett got through.
But that was all legitimate.
I mean, that's just smart politics by McConnell. That's within the normal kind of disagreement
between Democrats and Republicans. Yeah, the Republicans got the upper hand, but if the Democrats were in the same position,
I'm sure they would have done that same thing. So instead, now they're turning to things like trying to pack the court.
But that's not unprecedented. Franklin Roosevelt tried to do it as well,
didn't go down very well, didn't, it wasn't successful,
but you know, you try to change the rules of the game,
but you're trying to change at least the rules
of the game as it currently exists,
and both sides agree, and even on the left,
what those rules are.
You're listening to John Geer and Kate Karney
on Let's Find Common Ground.
I'm Ashley. I'm Richard. You're listening to John Geer and Kate Karney on Let's Find Common Ground.
I'm Ashley. I'm Richard.
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Now back to our interview and more with Kate Karney and John Geer.
Kate, what do committed liberals and committed conservatives get wrong about the other side?
So we call this a perception gap and we've asked and done research on this
in a variety of different ways,
but it really is the difference between what we imagine
in opposing group beliefs and what that group actually believes.
So in other words, we ask Republicans,
but they think Democrats think about an issue,
and then we ask Democrats what they actually think
about in certain issue and vice versa.
So we most recently did this around the topic
of teaching US history.
We released a report at the end of teaching US history. We released
a report at the end of last year called diffusing the history wars. And what we found was that
many Republicans underestimate Democrats' commitment and support and celebrating American
achievements and an overall story of progress. And so what that looks like in a perception gap is
87% of Democrats don't think students should feel helpless or feel guilty or just empowered
when learning about past injustices. But Republicans only thought about 46% of Democrats don't think students should feel helpless or feel guilty or just empowered
when learning about past injustices.
But Republicans only thought about 46% of Democrats thought that way.
So way more Democrats actually believe that than Republicans think.
Conversely, Democrats very much underestimated Republicans' willingness to recognize failures
in American history and the roles of actual minority groups and how they play in making our
country better.
So over 90% of Republicans think we have a responsibility
to learn from our past and fix our mistakes.
But Democrats only thought that 35% of Republicans
really thought that way.
And so I really think what this shows is that,
again, the more extreme polarizing sides are being presented
as views of the entire kind of party or electorate.
And that is oftentimes where we feel like we're getting
our information from about the views that are represented
by different parties.
Where really, it is not necessarily representative
of all Republicans or all Democrats.
And it makes it harder to really understand and see
where maybe some common ground might actually be.
Speaking of common ground, John, do you think that most people are looking, for examples,
where political leaders are working to find common ground through compromise and working
together?
Yeah, I do think that.
I mean, I think people want problem solved.
They want our education system to be better.
They want the economy to be doing even better.
Obviously, it's doing well on jobs right now,
but inflation seems to be certainly.
Problem, they want those things solved
and they realize that we need to have some compromise.
And I think this country is basically overall slightly
conservative to the right side of the spectrum overall but
people also want things to get done and they don't want all the drama tied to
people like Trump and other things along those lines and at the end of the day
we need to make sure we're getting the policies through each of you what would
you say is the most interesting finding in your research that most people are completely unaware of?
So, one that I really like to come back to that I helps ground to me also in all of these conversations
is we found that only a third of Americans feel like they have a voice in the political conversation today.
And a majority of Americans feel like both Democrats and Republicans don't listen
enough to regular Americans.
And ultimately, I think Americans, no matter what part of your part of it, where you come
from, we have this underlying feeling and desire of wanting to feel heard and understood
and we're losing spaces to really be able to undo that.
Our perception gap research shows that we don't understand, but the other side thinks.
And so I think how can we create spaces?
How can we really make sure that Americans have spaces
to feel understood by one another?
Because again, it's this unifying concept.
I think we can all relate to.
And it's just really much needed in our political debates
today.
Yeah, I mean, there's a series of findings.
But one that I harkened back to, and it actually
resonates very much with what Kate indicated.
One of the things we did at the Vanderbilt poll is we asked people to rate their own liberal
conservative tendencies, and then we asked them to rate the assessments of our state leaders,
how liberal conservative was the governor, how liberal conservative our senators were,
and how liberal conservatives were their fellow citizens were, and how liberal conservatives were, were their fellow citizens.
And that was a huge gap.
That is, that people were much more moderate in the state of Tennessee than their perception
of their fellow citizens.
And the perception of the state legislature, our state legislature, is very conservative.
And so you have this problem that people have created their own media bubbles where, in
fact, they perceive people to be far more extreme than they actually are.
But then of course you've got this gerrymandering that's going on that's basically taking all
the competition out of the political system and making a bunch of uncompetitive districts
that allow people to play to the left or to the right wing, which is a real problem because
democracy requires competition.
And the public wants that competition
but boy we don't see it in our in our elections these days
john do you think that
our democracy
is as
under threat
as some people say it is
hasn't been severely weakened
i don't know about severely i think it certainly has been weakened i mean the
fact that still a big hunk of Republicans do not think that Joe Biden won
the presidency is a problem.
There's a legitimacy issue here that worries me.
I mean, the country's in better shape now than it was a couple of years back.
I think that's true.
Obviously, the 2024 election will tell us, you know, tell us a lot.
I remain overall optimistic because the American public has shown good
judgment and some of Kate's data underscores that. I mean, people are exhausted. I buy that.
People want to get problem solved. That makes sense. And if you think back over the course,
I mean, the American public is basically chosen pretty wisely. And so I think we'll get out of this
problem. And if people want to think about how bad politics would
read up about the stuff that was going on during the Elyseis
grants presidency in the South, it was just absolutely horrible.
And we're not facing that kind of situation.
So overall, I'm optimistic.
But we are in a more weakened position than we had been.
Because what Donald Trump did was he,
there'd been basically a playing field
that both parties agreed on. Sometimes you were very much the left, sometimes the right, sometimes
in the middle. Trump didn't want to play on that field. And upset the apple cart in some ways.
And there's about 20% of Americans who seem to be still, you know, under his spell, so to speak,
mostly concentrating the Republican Party. And we'll see how that plays out.
The Republicans themselves, you talk about polarization among the country, the Republicans themselves are polarized.
From one another.
From one another because they have this loyalty to Trump, but a lot of Republicans, if you're Mitch McConnell,
you could have been majority leader for four more years if Donald Trump had been reasonable at all.
But because of the way he played things,
the Democrats got Senate seats that they shouldn't have gotten. That's got to be frustrating
to what I might call mainline Republicans.
Kate, do you have some hope for a future?
Yes, I think ultimately I am very optimistic. I think it is really important though to recognize that there are really powerful influences
that have a lot of incentives to stoke our division, that we need to address and need
to be aware of.
But our research shows and I firmly believe that the pieces are all in place, that we don't
have to choose this perception of kind of division that we've been given.
Our perception gap show that Americans are not as divided as we necessarily think that
we are.
There are true divisions that are always going to be there as a chance at it's part of
who we are as a country.
It's part of our identity, but how can we really better understand where we might have
more similarities than not and lean on those to help constructively navigate kind of
our challenges.
And more dirty Americans don't want this, this type of politics.
Again, they're exhausted and they're frustrated and they're tired.
So this is something that we don't want as a country.
So we're getting those pieces are there.
And just to leave, saw on, I think, a positive note last year we asked Americans if they
believe we have more in common than what divides us in 72% of Americans
Believe we have more in common than what divides us. So I think the American people haven't given up hope and
I think again, it's about I think choosing what country that we want for ourselves and not feeling like we have to accept this kind of perceived
world
That's being shaped by these forces,
again, that have a really great incentive
to emphasize our division.
Kate Karney, John Geer, thanks very much for joining us.
Let's find common ground.
Thank you.
Appreciate it.
Right at the start of our interview, John Geer said,
not only is the nation more divided than it was,
but that, quote,
the parties have become calcified in their partisanship.
That is an interesting phrase.
And the next election may not change anything.
Just days ago, President Biden announced he's running for re-election.
And if Biden wins, he'll be 82 years old when he begins his second term.
His main Republican opponent, at least for the moment, is Donald Trump, who will be in
his late 70s.
So he could well have a rematch of 2020.
Never before would the country be faced with a choice between two such elderly candidates.
The polling we just discussed also appears to show that Americans are much more divided
in party political terms than they are on policies.
In the words of Kate Carney, people are exhausted.
So perhaps there's a little bit of hope that comes in that finding a thirst or a hunger for finding common ground and seeking renewal in our political system. In every podcast, we aim to find common ground and we often share stories of people and politicians
who found it.
Let's find common ground is brought to you by Common Ground Committee.
And our team includes Bruce Bond, Eric Olsen, Donna Vislake, Mary Unglade and Brittany
Chapman.
Thanks also to our producer on the show Miranda Schaefer.
I'm Ashley Meltaite.
And I'm Richard Davies.
And thank you for listening.
This podcast is part of the Democracy Group.
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