Throughout most of the twentieth century, the Democratic Party identified strongly as the party of the working class, contrasting itself against a Republican Party closely tied to business interests and the affluent. Consider the 1960 presidential election. John F. Kennedy overwhelmingly won white voters without college degrees, even as he lost by an equally large margin among whites who had graduated from college. But these old political alignments have come undone.

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The Class Traitor from Queens—Degree-Holding as the Defining Cleavage

  • Spencer Goidel,
  • Kirby Goidel

摘要

Throughout most of the twentieth century, the Democratic Party identified strongly as the party of the working class, contrasting itself against a Republican Party closely tied to business interests and the affluent. Consider the 1960 presidential election. John F. Kennedy overwhelmingly won white voters without college degrees, even as he lost by an equally large margin among whites who had graduated from college. But these old political alignments have come undone.