twenty42
Jr. Member
Posts: 861
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« on: June 08, 2018, 04:07:17 AM » |
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« edited: June 08, 2018, 04:18:24 AM by twenty42 »
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1964–D+22.4 1968–R+23.3 1972–R+22.5 1976–D+25.2
What I find interesting/ironic about this is that the 1960s-70s are often considered a high point of tumult and controversy in American history, yet numbers show it was also arguably the low point of political polarization. There was still a very large swing vote despite the incessant violence and depression of the era. It provides an interesting contrast with the 2000s-10s, where political views remain highly polarized and baked in despite facing a lot of the same cultural issues we were facing two generations ago.
Also utterly remarkable is that the NPV swung 38 points from 1956 to 1964 and then 46 points from 1964 to 1972. Almost makes you wonder if any true partisans even existed during those 16 years.
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