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Stanford Experts Weigh In On Election, Deep Political Divide In U.S.
Historic presidential election reveals a country and its electoral system in turmoil, Stanford experts say. (Breaking)
PALO ALTO, CA ā Stanford University political science and law professors dissect the result of Tuesday's landmark election and what it means to us, all, going forward.
BY ALEX SHASHKEVICH
Most political scientists and experts agree that the 2016 presidential election stands out for an unprecedented level of discord in the countryās political sphere.
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āItās a very, very significant and historic development, which not only suggests that our party system is in flux, but also that there is deep turbulence in the electorate,ā said political science and sociology Professor Larry Diamond, a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution and at the Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies.
Donald Trumpās victory over Hillary Clinton for president is the first time since 1940 that a major political partyās candidate had previously held no elected office or high-ranking governmental position.
Trump āchanged the rules of political discourse and political campaigning,ā said law Professor Nathaniel Persily. āHe broke the mold as to what a viable candidacy entails.ā
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While Trump won the election, the American public expressed a record level of displeasure with both major party presidential candidates.
āThere has never been a presidential election where you had such a high negative rating for both presidential candidates and where each candidate was distrusted by such high majorities of Americans,ā Diamond said.
Diamond added that he couldnāt recall an election when āsuch a large swath of the intellectual and policy establishment explicitly rejected and denounced the candidacy of their partyās nominee,ā noting that many members of the Republican leadership were critical of Donald Trump and his campaign.
The tone of the race for president also reached previously unseen levels of nastiness, according to some experts. āThe level of personal vitriol has been sky high,ā Diamond said. āWeāve just seen nothing like this.ā
A divided country
Before Election 2016, political polarization was usually thought of as a term to describe the differences in party platforms between the Republicans and the Democrats.
This notion shifted with Trumpās candidacy this year, experts said.
āWhat Trumpās campaign has shown is the way we thought about polarization is too narrow,ā Persily said. āTrump is about more than partisanship.ā
For example, historically Republican candidates tended to be more pro-trade. They advocated for a tough stance against the countryās political adversaries and a stronger commitment to the U.S. allies than their Democratic counterparts.
āThe Republican candidate is commonly seen as stronger on foreign policy and more willing to stand up to the Russians, to put it more crudely,ā Diamond said.
This election cycle flipped those positions. The Democratic candidate was seen as advocating a tougher position when dealing with Russia, and the Republican was viewed as more anti-trade and anti-globalization, Diamond said.
Itās unclear yet how Trumpās campaign and political positions will affect the long-term future of the Republican Party. Some experts believe the division within the party is significant.
āThere is a sense that (Republicans) lost control of the party to an insurgent who doesnāt share many of their principles and ideological beliefs,ā said Diamond, comparing the 2016 election cycle to 1964, when Republican candidate Barry Goldwater also lacked support of his partyās establishment.
The prevalence of social media and its impact has contributed to further division and polarization of the U.S. electorate, experts said. āBecause the news media is so fragmented, people opt into the social echo chambers that provide them the truth they want to hear,ā Persily said.
Although the Internet provides an opportunity for education, it has also been used as a tool to spread false information. āSocial media has had a very negative affect,ā said Stanford political scientist Francis Fukuyama. āThe total effect has been to move us toward what I call a post-fact world. And thatās a scary thought.ā
Now experts are pondering what will happen next in this tense political climate.
A system in need of reform
The division and polarization are likely to persist and suggest a general unhappiness with the countryās political system.
āThe American political system is in a lot of trouble,ā said Fukuyama, who is also the Olivier Nomellini Senior Fellow at the Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies. āItās not an accident that people think itās decayed or broken down.ā
The countryās rising economic inequality and the frequent gridlock in the federal government are among the issues experts predict will continue to foment discord.
Bringing leaders of both parties together to reform the political system could help change the general sentiment, but itās unlikely that partnership will happen, Persily said. āThe American public is deeply divided in this election. This wonāt disappear anytime soon.ā
Diamond suggested the country look to Maine, which just passed a referendum for a statewide system of ranked-choice voting. Such a system may help alleviate the current polarization, he said. āThe bottom line is: We need political reform. We need to work on civic education but we also need to reform the incentives that drive this polarization.ā
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--Stanford News Service/Photos Gage Skidmore via Wikimedia Commons