“…Casual observers of American politics are constantly bombarded with headlines about how contemporary legislative politics have become increasingly partisan. Whether due to the natural geographic sorting of voters into more ideologically homogeneous constituencies (e.g., Chen and Rodden, 2013; Dodd and Oppenheimer, 2017), gerrymandering (e.g., La Raja, 2009), or the general empowerment of party leaders (e.g., Aldrich and Rohde, 2017), many congressional scholars have suggested that parties in the United States Congress are more ideologically divergent than they have been for over a century (e.g., Hare and Poole, 2014). Likewise, scholars of political psychology (e.g., Hetherington and Rudolph, 2015) have argued that this increase in partisanship has corresponded to a decrease in trust across the parties, which makes the policymaking process increasingly contentious in Washington.…”