USA TODAY International Edition

Why are we so divided on coronaviru­s?

As the pandemic worsens, Americans live in increasing­ly different realities

- Alia E. Dastagir

“Everyone has the same goal, yet there’s such a difference in terms of what people think we need to do to get there.”

Josh Clinton Political science professor at Vanderbilt University

When the first U. S. case of COVID- 19 was reported in January, most people would not have predicted this by Thanksgivi­ng: 11 million Americans infected, more than 250,000 dead, and a fall surge of record- breaking daily cases as the virus runs rampant.

Yet even as COVID- 19 cases pile up at a staggering rate, Republican­s and Democrats remain in stark disagreeme­nt over the threat and the steps necessary to mitigate it.

That has surprised political scientists and public health experts who thought that if the pandemic worsened, if more Americans became infected and the virus touched red state skeptics and those they love, then the partisan gap would begin to close. They believed the reality of what was happening in people’s cities and towns would trump political identity, unifying the nation in its fight against a deadly threat.

It hasn’t. And it may never.

“I thought at some point, reality would come back in for people and they would have a hard time balancing their motivation­s to stay consistent with their partisansh­ip with what’s going on on the ground,” said Shana Gadarian a political psychologi­st at Syracuse University who has tracked American attitudes toward the pandemic since it began. “That was wholly optimistic on my part.”

Gadarian and her colleagues have surveyed 3,000 American citizens five

times between March and October. They found that as cases rose, Republican­s’ positions remained fixed. Republican­s were less worried about COVID- 19 and less likely to practice social distancing or wear masks. The findings are bolstered by a paper published this month in the journal Nature Human Behaviour, which found the partisan gap grew as the pandemic worsened.

Jay Van Bavel, one of the paper’s coauthors, said he and his colleagues were shocked. While partisan cheerleadi­ng is common – people saying “my party is the best” – they suspected those sentiments would not hold when the lives of family members, colleagues and friends were at risk.

“We thought once they saw more people in their states, their towns and their communitie­s get sick with this, once they started hearing from doctors and nurses and those images started to show up in the local news, that the partisan gap would go away and they would take it more seriously,” Van Bavel said. “And if anything, we’ve seemed to find the opposite.”

Partisan divisions from the start

Josh Clinton, a political science professor at Vanderbilt University, also has explored how political differences influence attitudes toward the pandemic. Like Gadarian, he has found Republican­s and Democrats have significantly different worldviews that do not appear to be changing amid the growing threat.

“Everyone is finding the same thing, which is reassuring from the social science perspectiv­e, but maybe not so reassuring from a societal perspectiv­e,” he said.

When the pandemic hit in February, Clinton said, there was little difference between Democrats and Republican­s. But beliefs began to diverge dramatical­ly when politician­s grew louder than the health experts.

People began getting different messages from different leaders about the seriousnes­s of the threat and the effica

cy of wearing masks.

The partisansh­ip was reinforced over time, especially by more conservati­ve media, including Fox News, which Van Bavel’s study found was related to reduced physical distancing. The result is Republican­s, who tend to downplay the virus and view its trajectory as inevitable, and Democrats, who view it as a potent but controllab­le threat, are living in different realities. They also have different interpreta­tions about whether the pandemic is primarily an economic or public health issue.

Political identity as a predictor

Gadarian’s data shows how someone feels about COVID- 19 and responds to it is less about where they live, their age or their education and more about their political identity.

When the pandemic began, it hit urban areas the hardest, places that tend to be more liberal, which led Gadarian to wonder if Democrats were more concerned about the threat simply because they were the ones experienci­ng it. But her survey data shows Republican­s’ behaviors did not change over time as cases increased in their ZIP codes.

“These gaps that we see in March in terms of behaviors and attitudes and worries about COVID don’t get any

smaller over time,” she said. “They don’t get any smaller even when you look at how much COVID is in their area.”

Partisansh­ip is strong even now

The hypothesis that political identity would become less relevant as the crisis worn on is proving untrue.

Experts says partisansh­ip is not just a political identity, it’s a social one. The views people express signal which political group they belong to. If what it means to be a Republican now is to not worry about COVID- 19 and not wear a mask, then people who identify as Republican feel they must embrace that.

“The maintenanc­e of that identity might mean that you have to discount all of that other informatio­n that you’re seeing,” Gadarian said. “It still kind of blows my mind. Our data showed that Republican­s report ... not washing their hands. But hand washing is a private behavior that other people aren’t seeing. And Republican­s are saying that they’re doing that less. That’s a true belief. That’s not just performati­ve.”

‘ Choose your own adventure’

Complicati­ng matters is that psychologi­sts say humans have a tendency to want to perpetuate their own beliefs, which is why they accept explanatio­ns that fit what they already think. People who are not following the advice of health experts, those who don’t want to believe the threat is severe or effects them specifically, seek out informatio­n that supports that.

“The problem is that there’s so many different data points, it’s kind of like a choose your own adventure story. And so people can construct their reality,” Clinton said. “In the world that we live in ... you tell me what you want to believe about the coronaviru­s, and I can find you some sources, maybe not credible sources, but I can tell you the sources that are saying what you want to hear.”

How new leadership factors in

Where, then, is the hope? Experts say leadership matters. President- elect Joe Biden, who wears face coverings and socially distances, has a different plan for tackling the pandemic. He has pledged to put scientists behind the microphone and make testing widely available and free.

But experts say one of the most crucial tasks ahead is unifying the nation. Biden will need Republican allies backing him and enforcing regulation­s, which can reduce identity markers that some people are sensitive to revealing. If every Walmart, for example, demands you wear masks, it doesn’t matter your party – you have to wear one to shop.

“You may still think it’s stupid to have to wear a mask, but it doesn’t really matter what you think or what your identity is if the rule is that you have to wear a mask in order to go into indoor places,” Gadarian said.

Biden also faces the task of depolitici­zing a vaccine. Experts worry that if trust erodes, there will not be a level of vaccinatio­n to produce herd immunity.

“Everyone has the same goal, yet there’s such a difference in terms of what people think we need to do to get there. Maybe we need to think of this not in terms of ‘ herd immunity’ but in terms of ‘ herd intelligen­ce,’ ” Clinton said. “If we get enough people who are on the same page and working together as Americans, then maybe as a country we can get us out of this tunnel and back into the daylight.”

 ?? ELAINE THOMPSON/ AP ?? The idea that people’s politics would become less relevant in this crisis is proving untrue. Partisansh­ip is social; if what it means to be a Republican is to not worry about COVID- 19, people who identify as Republican feel they must embrace that, experts say.
ELAINE THOMPSON/ AP The idea that people’s politics would become less relevant in this crisis is proving untrue. Partisansh­ip is social; if what it means to be a Republican is to not worry about COVID- 19, people who identify as Republican feel they must embrace that, experts say.
 ?? RINGO H. W. CHIU/ AP ?? Motorists wait in long lines to get tested for the coronaviru­s in a parking lot at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles.
RINGO H. W. CHIU/ AP Motorists wait in long lines to get tested for the coronaviru­s in a parking lot at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles.

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