国产视频

Report / In Depth

Can Transpartisan Coalitions Overcome Polarization?

Lessons from Four Case Studies

Flag
Shutterstock

Heightened partisanship, declining confidence in聽institutions, and the rise of issue polarization have聽taken a toll on decades-old models for promoting聽policy change through centrist bipartisan coalitions.聽With traditional paths of policy entrepreneurship聽and compromise blocked, new ideas are not finding聽their way into the system, and outdated policies and聽structures are not being replaced.

The New Models of Policy Change project at New聽America studied one model which is producing聽interesting policy change at the local and national聽level: transpartisanship.

In a transpartisan approach, coalitions are not聽built outward from centrist political elites. Rather,聽policy proposals are championed by unlikely allies聽from the right and left, who may have very different聽ideological justifications for the same policy. Policy聽entrepreneurs recruit political endorsers from聽one or both sides. Thus, ideas are validated as聽legitimately liberal, progressive, conservative and/or libertarian鈥攏ot as a watered-down-compromise聽among ideologies鈥攂efore they reach the legislative聽fray. Allies and supporters can then be recruited聽from multiple factions without compromising their聽core ideological stances.

The New Models of Policy Change project studied聽the successes, failures, and key figures of this聽emerging approach to policy change. It produced聽a set of four case studies (criminal justice reform,聽Pentagon spending reduction, climate change and “climate care,” and opposition to Common Core聽education standards) identifying the circumstances聽under which the transpartisan approach can聽flourish, as well as those under which it falls short.聽These are the lessons we learned.

Downloads


More 国产视频 the Authors

Chayenne_Polim茅dio.jpg
Chayenne Polim茅dio

Fellow, Political Reform Program

Heather_Hurlburt.jpg
Heather Hurlburt

Director, New Models of Policy Change

Can Transpartisan Coalitions Overcome Polarization?