The Rule of Law in Red and Blue: Affective Polarization and Support for Legal Institutions in the United States
Abstract
A defining feature of democracies is an independent legal system, where elites and the public alike accept the broader legitimacy of its actions, even if they run counter to political preferences. Existing scholarship suggests that public support for rule of law institutions is rooted in perceptions of procedural fairness. However, amid increasing levels of affective polarization, we posit a partisan presidential heuristic wherein citizens' views of legal institutions are influenced by their partisanship and signals from the president. Through multiple experiments, we demonstrate that support for two key institutions-the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Department of Justice-is substantially derived from the intersection of one's partisan identity and their partisan proximity to the president. These effects are strongest among respondents exhibiting high levels of affective partisanship. Our results suggest that in forming perceptions of the rule of law, partisan politics is increasingly competing with perceptions of procedural fairness, thereby subverting support for legal institutions in the United States.
Repository Citation
Masood, Ali S., Ryan Strickler, and Michael A. Zilis. 2024. "The Rule of Law in Red and Blue: Affective Polarization and Support for Legal Institutions in the United States." American Politics Research 52(4): 403-413.
Publisher
Sage Publications
Publication Date
7-1-2024
Publication Title
American Politics Research
Department
Politics
Document Type
Article
DOI
https://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1532673X241253262
Keywords
Affective polarization, Presidency, Partisanship, Rule of law, Public opinion
Language
English
Format
text