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Here’s how many Republicans don’t want their kids to marry Democrats

Richard Ellis / Hulton Archive/ Getty
Andrew Prokop
Andrew Prokop is a senior politics correspondent at Vox, covering the White House, elections, and political scandals and investigations. He’s worked at Vox since the site’s launch in 2014, and before that, he worked as a research assistant at the New Yorker’s Washington, DC, bureau.

In a Monday op-ed for Bloomberg View, Cass Sunstein cites a stat that’s pretty remarkable — the number of people who say they’d be “displeased” if their child married someone from the opposite party has soared over the past 50 years:

Marriage party chart

In 1960, a mere 5 percent of Republican parents would have objected to this, but by 2010, 49 percent said they’d be displeased. Democrats also saw a huge increase, to 33 percent disapproval. This helps explain, for instance, this bumper sticker seen outside Washington, DC’s Eastern Market:

Dads Against Daughters Dating Democrats

(Photo: Eleanor Barkhorn)

Sunstein’s stat comes from a 2012 political science paper by Shanto Iyengar, Gaurav Sood, and Yphtach Lelkes, which found that “both Republicans and Democrats increasingly dislike, even loathe, their opponents.” Though the parties have grown increasingly polarized in voting behavior, these researchers argued that the increasing animus wasn’t based on policy differences, but rather “the rhetoric of political campaigns” and “the tendency of the media to recycle the candidates’ negative messages.”

It’s worth noting that a Pew survey asking a similar question earlier this year found less dramatic levels of disapproval — 22 percent of Republican parents, and 19 percent of Democratic parents said they’d be unhappy. However, that question’s hypothetical involved “a member of your immediate family” marrying a partisan foe, not specifically the respondent’s child. Still, those levels are higher than the 1960 survey found.

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