“…Increased partisanship in American politics has been attributed to shifting generational attitudes (Strauss and Howe, 1991), cyclical economic conditions (Gelman, et al, 2010;and Pontusson and Rueda, 2008), an increasingly fragmented state of media (e.g., Campante and Hojman, 2010;Davis and Owen, 2008;Duca and Saving, 2012a;Gul and Pesendorfer, 2012;Iyengar and Hahn, 2009;Jamieson and Cappella, 2008, Jones, 2001, and Prior, 2005, and greater income inequality (e.g., Bartels (2008), Feddersen and Gul, 2013;McCarty, Poole, and Rosenthal 2006, forthcoming;and Stiglitz, 2012). 8 The first of these factors is difficult to test with time series data owing to the low frequency of generational shifts, while the tendency of business cycles to reverse implies that economic cycles are unable to account for long-term shifts in polarization.…”