Class Politics and Political Change in the United States, 1952-1992
Journal article by Clem Brooks, Jeff Manza; Social Forces, Vol. 76, 1997.
30 pgs.

Class Politics and Political Change in the United States, 1952-1992
Journal article by Clem Brooks, Jeff Manza; Social Forces, Vol. 76, 1997
Class Politics and Political Change in the United States, 1952-1992
Journal article by Clem Brooks, Jeff Manza; Social Forces, Vol. 76, 1997
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| Class Politics and Political Change in the United States, 1952-1992⋆ CLEM BROOKS, Indiana University JEFF MANZA, Pennsylvania State University Abstract Recent debates over the relationship between class and voting in democratic capitalist societies have focused primarily on the question of whether levels of class voting have declined. As a result, few studies have distinguished between "class voting" as an outcome versus class factors as causal mechanisms of vote choice. This distinction is critical to understanding what role class-related factors play in explaining vote choice -- and thus to advancing debates over the changing relationship between class and political behavior in the U.S. and elsewhere. We use National Election Studies data to first investigate class-specific changes in voting behavior in presidential elections and then analyze the causal mechanisms explaining the three most significant class-specific trends. We find that while the realignment of the self-employed with the Republican Party is largely explained by class-related factors, professionals' realignment with the Democratic Party is a product of their increasingly liberal views of social issues. Also, prompted by higher levels of economic satisfaction and declining support for the welfare state, unskilled workers' historically high levels of support for Democratic candidates have eroded since the 1980 Presidential election. Our analyses also show that while class politics increasingly competes with other salient bases of voting behavior, the political impact of social issue attitudes has not displaced the class cleavage in recent presidential elections. ____________________ | | © The University of North Carolina Press Social Forces, December 1997 , 76(2):379-408 | | ⋆ | Authors' names are listed in alphabetical order, both contributed equally. Earlier versions of this article were presented at the 1995 annual meeting of the Social Science History Association and the 1996 annual meeting of the American Sociological Association. We thank participants on these panels, especially Steven Brint and Erik Olin Wright, for their comments. Michael Hout provided us with invaluable comments from the beginning of this project and we thank Santa Traugott for providing us with the raw frequencies from the National Election Studies used to create the simplified, two-digit occupational scheme used by the Center for Political Studies since 1988. We also thank Scott Long and two anonymous reviewers for their comments and suggestions. Data and codebooks from the American National Election Studies were provided by the Inter-University Consortium for Political and Social Research. The usual disclaimers apply. Direct all correspondence to Clem Brooks, Department of Sociology, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN, 47405. E-mail: cbrooks@indiana.edu. |
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Publication Information: Article Title: Class Politics and Political Change in the United States, 1952-1992. Contributors: Clem Brooks - author, Jeff Manza - author. Journal Title: Social Forces. Volume: 76. Issue: 2. Publication Year: 1997. Page Number: 379.
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