Coloradan Conversations examines polarization of politics
During the latest installment of the Coloradan alumni magazineâs dialogue series Coloradan Conversations on April 18, a discussion around the polarization of politics took center stage at the Chancellorâs Hall and Auditorium in the CASE building.
Focusing on the spring 2023 cover story, âHow Did Everything Get So Political?â, this hybrid event featured three CU Boulder experts addressing the rise of political branding strategies and how differing approaches to identity and social issues contribute to contemporary patterns of polarization.
Each presenter shared a detailed historical timeline providing context on how specific topics evolved into the political hot-button issues they are today. Following their individual research and insights, the experts engaged with audience membersâ reflections and questions during the panel discussion portion of the evening.Ìę
âWe often use the word politics to refer to electoral politics,â said speaker Jennifer Hendricks, a professor of law and co-director of the Juvenile and Family Law Practice. âSo, when we ask the question, âhow did everything get so political?ââwhat we often mean is âhow did it get so partisan?ââÌę
Mobilizing change
Celeste Montoya, an associate professor of women and gender studies and faculty director for the Miramontes Arts & Sciences Program, shared a historical overview of how parties have realigned their approaches to race and gender and how this has contributed to contemporary patterns of polarization.Ìę
âIn the last 10 to 15 years, weâve seen some important mass mobilizations attempting to put some important issues back on the table when people felt the parties were failing to respond to them,â said Montoya.Ìę
These movements have included the immigrant rights movement, when Congress failed to pass meaningful legislation about immigration reform; the Occupy Wall Street movement, which resurfaced class politics and income inequality; the Black Lives Matter movement, which highlighted lingering social inequality; the #MeToo movements and the Womenâs March, which focused on gender violence; and the marriage equality and trans rights movements.Ìę
There has also been mobilization in the opposite direction, such as the anti-critical race theory, anti-trans rights movementsââand thatâs important to remember, too,â said Montoya.Ìę
That has led to significant partisan divides. Citing a March 2022 Pew Research study, she said, âRepublicans and Democrats in Congress are further apart ideologically today than at any time in the past 50 years.â
She also stated the country is at a pivotal point in our democracy: âAnd what happens next is not yet written in stone.âÌę
Montoya continued by explaining that here on the CU Boulder campus, weâre free to talk about certain issues, which is a right we shouldnât take for granted: â[That] makes it all the more important that we do [talk about them].â
Political branding
Doug Spencer, associate dean for faculty affairs and research and a professor of law focused on the rise of political branding, or the use of corporate advertising strategies to sell political ideasâalong with what branding strategies within the machinery of politics means for the right to vote in America.Ìę
He stressed the relationship between political parties, political polarization and the incentive structures among American politics. While scholars are still exploring all the reasons, causes and results of this polarization, Spencer said that he thinks political parties have a big role to play.
âPolitical parties have similar incentives to corporations, such as appealing to the broadest number of people in society so that they can win elections,â he said. âBut unlike corporations, political partiesâas long as they get 50% plus one of whoever shows up on election dayâthey get all the power and all the money.âÌę
According to Spencer, this results in parties having âcountervailing incentives to manipulate who shows up to vote and to exert as much effort deciding who votes as they do persuading people of their positions,â he said, âalong with the incentive of mobilizing their supporters while strategizing on ways to exclude the opposition from voting.âÌę
That means that political parties are strongly invested in preventing their own supporters from defecting. âThey prey on human psychology and help us learn the joy that we feel when others who arenât like us suffer,â said Spencer.
âThis is democracy on the low road; itâs not the ideal democracy. We need parties to maximize their value to everybody and not just to their current customers.â
Reproductive rights
Professor Jennifer Hendricks discussed the politicization of reproductionâs deep history in the United States and how it is intertwined with racial and gender hierarchies, both under Roe v. Wade and in the new, post-Roe regime of state control over pregnancy.Ìę
For example, she explained how Black womenâs reproduction was notably politicized after the prohibition of 1808, the year when Congress prohibited further imports of enslaved people into the U.S. In response, the slave states turned to inhumane forced childbearing and family separation that became the foundation for the political economy of the South and the nation.Ìę
Hendricks also shared how in the late 1800s, Indigenous womenâs reproduction was notably politicized when the U.S. government adopted a policy of âKill the Indian, save the man,â stripping Indigenous children of their culture.
Around that same time, although some disapproved of abortion, Hendricks said, â[People] thought of it as an act of desperation by an unmarried, pregnant woman rather than a political crisis. Abortion triggered a political reform movement when white, married womenâinspired by the Womenâs Rights Movement that symbolically began in Seneca Falls in 1848âbegan to use abortion as a way to control their bodies and their reproduction.âÌę
She described this as a ârebellion against husbands and against womenâs duty to the state to produce white babies in order to fulfill Manifest Destiny.âÌę
The states ultimately passed a total ban on abortion, which was then overturned when the Supreme Court decided Roe v. Wade in 1973.
A backlash was already in the works by the early years of whatâs referred to as the second wave of feminism during the Supreme Courtâs original ruling on Roe vs Wade. âOne of the most prominent features of that backlash was the focus of abortion, which emerged as an encapsulation of an entire range of beliefs about gender and the status of women,â said Hendricks.Ìę
Featured exhibitors and additional resources
The eveningâs two featured exhibitors included researchers from the LeRoy Kellerson Center for the First Amendment, which supports and encourages teaching, research and community outreach on topics and issues relating to the nature, meaning and contemporary standing of First Amendment rights and liberties.
Additionally, attendees had the opportunity to meet the team behind The Free Mind podcast. Hosted by Matthew Burgess, an assistant professor in the Department of Environmental Studies, the podcast explores topics in Western philosophy, politics, literature and history with adventurous disregard for academic fashions and intellectual trends.
about the polarization of politics and the eventâs featured experts. You can also online.
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