US Partisan Polarization on Climate Change: Can Stalemate Give Way to Opportunity?

Patrick J. Egan, and Megan Mullin
Cambridge University Press PS: Political Science & Politics, PS: Political Science & Politics, Volume 57, Issue 1, January 2024, pp. 30 - 35.

The rise of climate change on the global political agenda coincided with the growth of partisan polarization in US politics and, in many ways, their trajectories mirror one another. When the climate crisis first began to attract political attention 30 years ago, Republicans and Democrats responded with similar levels of interest and concern. Today, partisan division overwhelms all other aspects of climate-change politics and environmental politics more broadly (Egan, Konisky, and Mullin 2022; Egan and Mullin 2017).

Wagner Faculty