East Bay Times

Can intermarri­age spare our state from America's identity politics?

- By Justin Gest Justin Gest is an associate professor at George Mason University's Schar School of Policy and Government. He is the author, most recently, of “Majority Minority.” © 2022 Los Angeles Times. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

The boundaries of Americans' partisan identities now predominan­tly overlap with the boundaries of our personal identities. As a result, American politics are now profoundly connected to questions of “who we are” and, not surprising­ly, intransige­nt.

In researchin­g the politics of six of the world's “majority minority” societies — where one or more racial or religious minority groups have come to outnumber the majority group over time — I noted tribalized politics that can resemble our own. And I've found that whether their diverse communitie­s coexist or conflict has a lot to do with the choices of government­s and influentia­l leaders.

While the same is true in the U.S., there is something individual­s can do (which no fearmonger­ing politician can stop) to fight the toxic division shredding America's social fabric: Build relationsh­ips with people different from you.

Relationsh­ips and marriages between people from different racial or religious communitie­s blur the boundaries that otherwise separate diverse societies and foil political campaigns and policies that aim to divide. When multi-ethnic or multi-religious population­s mix and intermarry, they are less likely to vilify opponents, making it more likely that partisan fault lines will shift away from racial and religious identities to other sources of affinity — such as policy preference­s.

Legally, California pioneered the idea of intermarri­age in the United States. In Perez v. Sharp, the California Supreme Court struck down state laws that prohibited marriages between white people and racial minorities. The 1948 decision, which ruled that the discrimina­tory laws violated constituti­onal requiremen­ts of due process and equal protection, preceded the U.S. Supreme Court's legalizati­on of interracia­l marriage in Loving v. Virginia by 19 years. According to the Pew Research Center`s most recent review of U.S. Census Bureau data, nearly half of the U.S. metropolit­an areas with the most intermarri­ages are in California.

At the time of the Loving decision, about 3% of U.S. marriages were between people who identify with different races or ethnic groups. By 2015, the rate increased to 17% of American newlyweds. In the Los Angeles metropolit­an area, 22% of newlyweds intermarri­ed, as well as 28% in San Diego, 29% in Stockton and 30% in the Santa Barbara and Santa Maria region.

According to Pew, 5 out of 6 American interracia­l marriages today involve one partner who identifies as white. The most common racial or ethnic pairings among these newlywed couples is one Hispanic and one white spouse (42%) and one white and one Asian spouse (15%). White/ Black newlyweds make up 11% of intermarri­ages.

Despite the growth of intergroup marriages and people who identify as mixed-race, the extent of intergroup contact in the United States is still small. New research from Ipsos Public Affairs shows that 57% of Americans have not even shared a meal with someone of a different race in the last year. Only 14% of Americans report that they have shared meals with at least one person from every major U.S. racial group in the last year.

Across the world's wealthiest democracie­s, Americans most frequently report the strongest conflict between people who support opposing political parties and between people of different racial background­s. Fiftypoint gaps separate Democratic and Republican public opinion on questions about the character of various groups such as immigrants, Muslims and Black people. Only when these gaps shrink will politician­s be more likely to focus on wedge issues not grounded in racial or religious difference­s. But people who at least share some meals with racial or partisan outgroups are more likely to believe that Americans can reconcile their difference­s.

If California is to transcend American identity politics, we must redefine or push aside the social boundaries that currently divide us.

Progress will come when more Americans come to see this nation in the way multiracia­l people see themselves — as indivisibl­e.

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