Polarization is driven by both policy disagreements and affective dislike, with partisanship becoming a social identity linked to racial, religious, and cultural identities.
Proponents argue transparency and predictability, believing party affiliation would clarify candidates' stances on various issues, including education and taxpayer spending.
DeSantis aims to align local school boards with his education agenda, particularly the parental rights movement, and has endorsed and funded candidates who support his policies.
The shift could lead to more partisan and less policy-focused elections, where voters base decisions on party affiliation rather than candidates' actual positions on education issues.
Recent polls show about 40% support, well short of the 60% needed for passage, with 30% undecided, indicating a small chance of the measure passing.
Affective polarization is based on feelings of dislike and distrust between parties, not just policy disagreements, making it easier to dehumanize opponents.
Social identities like race, religion, and culture have aligned with party identities, making electoral outcomes feel like victories or losses for broader social groups, increasing animosity.
Dehumanization occurs when people perceive the other party as fundamentally different and threatening across multiple dimensions, making it easier to vilify them as evil or subhuman.
Reinstating broken norms of acceptable behavior in politics and society, and collectively enforcing these norms through community standards and shame, could help reduce polarization.
Florida is looking to turn one of its last apolitical offices into yet another partisan job. It's the latest example of political polarization making its way into nearly every aspect of American life.
This episode was produced by Victoria Chamberlin, edited by Matt Collette, fact-checked by Laura Bullard, engineered by Andrea Kristinsdottir and Patrick Boyd, and hosted by Noel King.
Transcript at vox.com/today-explained-podcast)
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A demonstrator holds a "Ban Hate" placard at a rally in Miami, Florida. Photo by Eva Marie Uzcategui/Bloomberg via Getty Images.
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