Journal article
Disaster, Distributive Politics, and the Persistence of Partisan Divides in Climate Policy
PRQ: Political Research Quarterly, Vol.online ahead of print
09/30/2025
Web of Science ID: WOS:001584865400001
Metrics
3 File views/ downloads
23 Record Views
Abstract
Can district interests mitigate partisan differences over climate policy? While debates over climate policy are highly partisan, local economic and national defense interests may create cross-cutting pressures that reduce polarization. Here, we analyze whether district characteristics mitigate partisan differences on climate change, particularly public opinion and exposure of military installations to weather-related damage. Using two studies—one using a large language model to measure the positions lawmakers take in congressional email newsletters and another employing a survey experiment testing framing effects—we assess whether national defense and economic concerns mitigate partisan divisions. Our findings suggest that Republicans representing districts where severe weather events threaten local military infrastructure express more support for " pro-climate " policy than other Republicans, and that Democrats representing environmentally conservative districts express less support. However, our experiment found no evidence that the issue frame influences voters' opinions.
Files and links (2)
Related links
Details
- Title
- Disaster, Distributive Politics, and the Persistence of Partisan Divides in Climate Policy
- Publication Details
- PRQ: Political Research Quarterly, Vol.online ahead of print
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Publisher
- Sage Publications, Inc.; THOUSAND OAKS
- Number of pages
- 15
- Grant note
- A.I. training and classification
We thank Gabriel Garrett for his invaluable help with the A.I. training and classification. Additionally, we thank Erin Jackson for her assistance in data collection. Lastly, we are grateful to the Haas Center at the University of West Florida for conducting the study's survey.
- Copyright
- © The Author(s) 2025. © 2025, Sage Publications
- Identifiers
- WOS:001584865400001; 99381501396706600
- Academic Unit
- Reubin O'D. Askew Department of Government ; College of Arts, Social Sciences, and Humanities
- Language
- English