Stephen Skowronek's partisan regime theory invites challenges concerning how we can measure such regimes, especially if the variable of analysis is “institutional reconstruction” associated with a new president. But if we follow an interpretation by Andrew Polsky and look for cycles of partisan narratives—later candidates praising the accomplishments of a new president—I argue that partisan regime theory can be measured and it provides a straightforward explanation for why a small number of presidents seem to dominate America's political imagination. I suggest a new rationale for and measurement of the crises that are a necessary but insufficient condition for a new narrative regime to begin.
Younger voters today, defined as under the age of 30 and often labeled the Millennial Generation, have shown high support for Barack Obama and for certain statements about activist government. Are we witnessing some generational effect for a significant percentage of the Millennials, stemming from their growing up during impressionable years under first George W. Bush and then Obama? To study this question with a historical analogy, I use the ANES to compare under-30 cohorts under Jimmy Carter as a benchmark and then Ronald Reagan much more extensively. I find evidence consistent with categories advanced by Sears (1983). The Reagan years disproportionately shifted this age group’s symbolic attitudes, including partisanship, self-reported ideology, and approval of Reagan himself, but not most specific policy opinions. If this finding generalizes, recent events may leave a Democratic imprint on the Millennials, but their current measures of policy liberalism should not be attributed overmuch to Obama’s influence.
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