No News Is Bad News for Civil Discourse
The disappearance of local newspapers is making national politics more polarized.
Transitional technology.
Photographer: Bloomberg/BloombergWhen’s the last time you read your local newspaper? And, no, I’m not counting the New York Times or the Washington Post. I mean a locally published paper that focuses on local events. Chances are, even if you live in a suburb or a small town, you don’t read the paper too often. Your town might not even have one. And that absence, according to a study described this week in Scientific American, might be an overlooked cause of political polarization.
In an earlier account of their research, the authors remind us that in 2016, “more voters cast straight party-line ballots than at any point in the past century.” As recently as 1992, more than one out of three states split their ballots, electing a senator of a different party from that which won the state’s electoral votes. In 2016, not a single state did so.
