Re: Public opinion on schools: People should note that the vast majority of parents saying they want kids to “return” belong to the white, professional, insured class. Parents of color (many in multigenerational households) desperately want their children to stay remote.
A new wrinkle in racial disparities in education is that the divide on covid is also happening WITHIN schools — IE in big urban high schools with sizable white and POC populations, the data I’ve seen show nearly unanimous POC opposition to “returning”

Yes, there certainly are interactions with pop density and student-to-teacher ratios

My anecdata are not perfectly representative, but it seems like the same story in many suburbs — mostly-white movements dedicated to “reopening” schools have been able to wield a tremendous amount of power over decision-makers, teachers, & POC parents

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More from @gelliottmorris

10 Feb
The evidence Dems are presenting at Trump’s trial is pretty damn terrifying. A reminder of just how far radicalization on the right has gone. Some data:

- 20-40% of GOP partisans think violence is justified*
- Upwards of 15% might even *enjoy* it

That’s like ~20-40m people...
*To some degree and depending on the conditions.

Some reading:

washingtonpost.com/politics/2021/…

stevenwwebster.com/research/schad…
It is totally fair to point out that Dems are about as likely as Reps (in polls) to say political violence can be justified. But we also have to acknowledge that only one side of the aisle stormed Congress to try and murder the VP and Speaker of the House.
Read 4 tweets
5 Feb
People are really running wild with this stuff. Totally unwarranted IMO. Just a fraction of a fraction of GOP members have left on net — maybe a quarter of a percent of the national party reg. Roughly ~99.7% of GOP voters remain. This is not a party in crisis
Party registration is not the same as vote choice. I still think it’s less than an even bet whether Biden’s vote share goes up from 2020 to 2024. History is not on his side here

I think the polarization interaction is more important here, and certainly that the Bush 04 example isn’t instructive of the trend, but I could be wrong. Anyway, the point is that people should stop covering the party reg data as doomsday for the GOP.

Read 4 tweets
4 Feb
Hard for me to admit, but honestly folks, we have no reason not to think the same biases that hurt most polls in Nov 2020 aren't artificially boosting Biden's approval rating right now. Eg there are huge differences between polls that use only demo v demo + political weights.
To believe that Biden is at 61% approval you have to also think that about 1/5th of Trump voters approve of Biden now, which seems... tough. The average seems much closer.
Two points: (1) I guess biased estimates are still useful, if you're aware of the bias.

(2) Of course you can, if you aren't expecting polls to be magically precise (they never will be) and accept a pretty large margin of error
Read 7 tweets
4 Feb
For what it’s worth, over the last month of our Economist/YouGov data I have seen almost no breakdown in the relationship between partisanship and Trump approval (and, earlier, support for QAnon). The idea that Greene/Jan 6 is costing the GOP... anything? has little-no evidence.
This is a good question. To me, the party-switching stories aren’t much more than just data porn for anti-Trumpers. You gotta look at the total numbers and the share of Dems/NPAs switching too.

Read 7 tweets
24 Jan
The GOP is actively trying to purge its pro-democracy, anti-coup members. We should wonder how much worse the last three months would have been without effective gatekeepers in the rank-and-file. A safe assumption for policymakers is that it will be a lot worse next time.
Even if they don’t succeed at removing Cheney and McConnell, GOP-controlled states are going to spend the next 4 years passing new restrictive voting laws, cutting polling places, killing mail-in voting and drawing partisan maps to give themselves even bigger advantages.
Hard to see the Republicans as anything other than a fundamentally minoritarian, anti-democracy, anti-election party right now.
Read 5 tweets
21 Jan
Democrats would need to be FDR-levels of popular and productive to avoid mid-term losses the first go-around. I don’t know about y’all, but while I think Biden is talented, I’m doubtful he can lead the party to THAT strong a record. Operating assumption is GOP Congress in 2022.
Not true at all — if you go back and read what I wrote, or talk to my colleagues, you’ll know I was bullish on Biden pretty much the entire primary

Final thought: You can save this tweet for later, but I really doubt this changes the electoral environment at all. For one thing, the GOP’s favorability ratings haven’t suffered at all from the attack on the Capitol. If anything it has helped them.

Read 5 tweets

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