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Study Finds Law Professor Contributions to Political Campaigns Skew Overwhelmingly Democratic
Notre Dame law Prof. Derek Muller so finds in a new analysis of law professor political donations between 2017 and 2023.

Notre Dame law Professor Derek Muller - a leading election law scholar - has posted a study he conducted of the partisan distribution of political donations by law professors between 2017 and 2023. Not surprisingly, they skew overwhelmingly towards Democratic candidates:
I identified 3148 law faculty who contributed only to Democrats in this 5+ year span—95.9% of the data set of those identified as contributing to either Democrats or Republicans in this period. Another 88 (2.7%) contributed only to Republicans. And 48 others contributed to both Democrats and Republicans.
The dollar figures were likewise imbalanced but slightly less so. About $5.1 million went to Democrats in this period, about 92.3% of the total contributions to either Democrats or Republicans. About $425,000 went to Republicans. (Around $6000 went to others.)
The overall result here is far from surprising. Lots of previous studies find that law professors are skew towards the political left. Still, the extent of the imbalance is notable. Exclusively Democratic contributors outnumber exclusively Republican ones by over 35 to 1. That's a larger disproportion than in previous studies.
In addition, Democratic contributors outnumber Republican ones at every single school included in the study, usually by large margins. My own law school (George Mason University) is often considered right-wing. Nonetheless, Muller finds we had 11 Democratic contributors and only six Republican ones; two people contributed to candidates of both parties [I was one of the Republican contributors, for idiosyncratic reasons explained in an update at the end of this post]. That figure of six is the highest number of exclusive GOP donors at any school in the study. By contrast, there are many schools with dozens of Democratic contributors.
The disproportion is comparably large measured by money totals, rather than numbers of contributors. Faculty at only two schools (Northwestern and Wayne State) contributed more to Republicans than Democrats. In the case of Northwestern, the disproportion is very great: $167,245 contributed to Republicans versus $64,460 given to Democrats. But this figure is misleading. Muller's data shows that Northwestern had 32 faculty who contributed to Democrats, compared to only one who gave to Republicans (this individual apparently also gave money to at least one Democratic candidate, as well). This one professor is so committed to the GOP that he or she gave more than twice as much to their campaigns as his 32 Democratic-contributing colleagues gave to the Democrats combined!
Muller notes a few caveats about the data, most notably that faculty with strong political views don't necessarily donate to candidates. For example, Muller's own school, Notre Dame, had 14 Democratic contributors during the time-frame studied, and no Republican ones. But Notre Dame does in fact have several prominent conservative or libertarian legal scholars. Similarly, Northwestern had more than one right-of-center faculty member during this period (I know of about four or five). There are cases like this at other schools, too.
In addition, the time-frame likely reduces the number of Republican donors, compared to previous eras. The period covered in the study (2017-23) is the era of the Trump takeover of the GOP, which famously alienated many highly educated people who previously backed the party. Almost by definition, lawprofs fall in the highly educated group. I myself stopped voting for the GOP in presidential elections during the Trump era, and likely some other conservative and libertarian lawprofs did the same. A 2005 study of elite law school faculty campaign contributions also found a large Democratic skew, but a bit smaller than that in Muller's study of the 2017-23 period.
Another caveat is that people might donate to a candidate because they think he or she is a lesser evil compared to the available alternatives, not because they actually like that person's ideology or the agenda of their party. I voted for Hillary Clinton and Joe Biden in 2016 and 2020 on such lesser-evil grounds, even though I have little love for them or their party. I just found Trump to be even worse. While I did not donate any money to Clinton or Biden, myself, it's possible some lawprofs donate to lesser-evil candidates as well as vote for them. We cannot always assume that people who donate to a candidate or party necessarily share their ideology.
Finally, a disproportionate number of non-left wing legal academics are libertarians (myself included). For obvious reasons, they may be disinclined to contribute money to candidates from either major party. Some might instead give to the Libertarian Party or its candidates (Muller found a total of only $6000 in donations to third-party campaigns). But many might not because they believe the LP has no chance of winning or because they are disillusioned by the awful Mises Caucus takeover of the party in 2022 (near the end of the study period). Studies focusing on campaign contributions probably undercount libertarians.
There are likely other limitations to the data, as well. Still, when all is said and done, the ideological and partisan imbalance in legal academia is very large. Muller's data further confirms it.
At this point, readers may wonder why it matters what law professors' views are. It's not like lawprofs are an important voting bloc, or a major source of campaign funds (with the possible exception of the big GOP donor at Northwestern!). I explained why lawprofs' views matter in a previous post:
[L]aw professors can influence the views of law students, who—of course—go on to be the next generation of lawyers. Lawyers, in turn, have disproportionate influence on a wide range of public policies. A high proportion of politicians and other policymakers are lawyers, as—of course—are nearly all judges. Maybe lawyers shouldn't have so much influence. But they do.
Finally, a good many lawprofs have a direct influence on the development of law and public policy. Courts often adopt ideas that were first developed by academics….
Even outside the courts, lawprofs sometimes have significant influence on government policy. For example, Harvard law Prof. Cass Sunstein has helped influence governments around the world to adopt policies based on "nudging" and other forms of "libertarian paternalism."
Because of this influence, it would be good if there were more ideological diversity in legal academia. Studies indicate that ideological diversity can improve the quality of discourse and scholarship. If all or most scholars in a given field have similar views, that increases the likelihood that some key issues and arguments will be ignored or at least relatively neglected.
As I have emphasized before (e.g. here and here), the desirability of greater ideological diversity doesn't mean schools should adopt affirmative action for non-left-wing legal academics, or that we should strive for a legal academy that "looks like America" in terms of the distribution of partisanship and ideology. But much can be achieved simply ending or significantly reducing ideological discrimination in faculty hiring.
As with racial, ethnic, and gender discrimination, ideological discrimination not only reduces diversity, but also reduces the quality of scholarship and teaching. Lower-quality candidates with the preferred views get hired in preference to better-qualified dissenters. Thus, we can potentially increase diversity and quality at the same time.
Even if discrimination ended completely, we would likely still have a disproportionate number of left-wing and Democratic lawprofs relative to the proportions of these groups in the general population. Among other things, highly educated people - especially in the Trump era - tend to skew left, or at least against the conservative right. But ending discrimination would nonetheless make legal academia more ideologically diverse than it is now.
UPDATE: In the original version of this post, I said I had not made any political contributions during the period in question. However, my wife reminds me that, back in 2017, I made a $250 contribution to anti-Trump Republican Senator Jeff Flake's abortive reelection campaign (who also had a lot of libertarian leanings). I did not donate to any Democratic campaigns during this time, though I did vote for the Democratic nominee in both the 2016 and 2020 presidential elections. Thus, I am included in Muller's data as one of George Mason's six Republican contributors! This is one of those cases where the donation data doesn't accurately reflect a person's overall partisan/ideological leanings.
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Study Finds Law Professor Contributions to Political Campaigns Skew Overwhelmingly Democratic
Thank you Captain Obvious.
Study Finds Water Is Wet
Self awareness is a step in the right direction Bob from Ohio, we must commend the professor. 🙂
Study finds political contributions of those who can't do skew overwhelming democratic.
Or, Study Finds Conservative Law Professors are Cheapskates.
The first paragraph rebuts that strongly, and the example from Northwestern disproves it as a rule.
The first paragraph describes the distribution of donors, not non-donors.
But check out the bit about George Mason, plenty of conservative professors yet donors still favor Democrats almost two to one. Why? Because most conservatives who aren't cheapskates are either skinflints or tightwads.
Or maybe because donations are public records, and doing anything more than saying that you're a Republican gets a target painted on your back.
I've seen comparative statistics for the political leanings of academia today and a quarter century ago, and the difference is stark. Back in the late 90's most universities almost completely stopped hiring anybody they could identify as conservative, and the last quarter century has seen a very effective purge by attrition.
Yet again a trend getting bigger does not mean there is a nationwide co spinach to make it so.
We have a winner. Any Conservative Professor or Instructor makes the snowflakes, they call students, not feel "safe" and are culled from the herd.
The bit about George Mason says it is "often considered right-wing". It says nothing about the actual number of conservative professors.
You're sure living down to the reputation of leftoid commenters here as bad readers.
Wait are you saying Anthony Scalia School of Law may be full of liberal law professors?
It may be like labor unions.
The Laborers are tilted toward conservative, but leadership is leftwing. Much like the Democrat Party. Pays lip service to blue collar male workers,minorities, but only represents the top % of wage earners, and AWFULs
So you have never spoken to anyone who goes to the school, or looked anything up about the school, which helps give you maximum speculation range.
Problem is it's really easy to figure out if your speculation is true.
And I know enough GMU law alumns to tell you it's not.
GMU alums dont run the University
GMU alums don't teach the courses
I provided twice the evidence you have
GMU alums know who runs the university, and who teaches the courses.
You made up a story; that's all you did.
To settle this we need a followup study on whether those stingy conservative law profs are also bad tippers.
"The first paragraph rebuts that strongly, and the example from Northwestern disproves it as a rule."
The example of a single Northwest professor is neither rebuttal nor disproof, but simple anecdote.
study finds that conservative lawyers don't want to be identified as such. (Are PAC contributions public?)
Law professors tend to be well-educated. They tend to prefer reason to superstition or supernatural fairy tales.
Modernity to backwardness.
Tolerance and inclusiveness to bigotry and insularity,
Science to dogma.
They tend to reside in modern, educated, successful communities and associate with educated, modern, successful people.
They likely prefer our nation's strongest teaching and research institutions to nonsense-teaching, backwater religious schools.
Is it wrong to figure, or surprising to observe, law professors tend not to support Republicans . . . or stale, ugly conservative thinking?
What do you have in mind, professor?
More racism (such as the racial slurs regularly encountered at this blog)?
More superstition-addled gay-bashing?
More hatred of immigrants?
More white nationalism?
More old-timey misogyny?
More antisemitism, Islamophobia, or Christian dominionism?
More white supremacy?
By all means, the professors who operate this white, male, conservative, bigot-embracing blog should illuminate the point: Why would our strongest schools wish to emulate weaker schools (conservative-controlled schools tend to be low-quality, low-reputation institutions that teach nonsense and censor the reality-based world to flatter dogma and superstition) by hiring more conservative faculty members? And which elements of conservative bigotry and superstition should be cultivated toward greater influence on strong campuses?
Law Professors sure, but what about disgraced Sex Offender Mediocre Big 10(11? 12? 13?) Defensive Coaches?
Frank
Prof Somin, you have frequently argued in favor of “foot-voting” as the solution to, well, most everything, and seem frustrated that the rest of us don’t immediately latch on to your proposed solution. Please apply the concept of foot-voting to the law school environment you describe.
Note that there are very few barriers to choosing a different law school – far fewer barriers than there are to actually moving to a different jurisdiction. Yet it is clearly proving to be ineffective.
I suggest that when you can articulate why it is ineffective here, you will have some insight into why it’s less effective than you argue elsewhere.
THIS
^ Home run (Rossami)
Because foot voting requires other "areas" to be different to be effective, whether geographical or institutional. When the entire legal academy has this lean there is no real partisan foot voting available. You will be at a school that is predominantly left leaning with maybe very rare exceptions many of which are at lesser schools.
He also has many posts against regulations that homogenize jurisdictions specifically because he believes that the most effective governance is to allow localities to be different and people to "foot vote". That is a crucial aspect of it that shows why this isn't the gotcha you think.
But foot voting has indeed been happening in legal academia, in the form of right leaning lawyers not even attempting to join legal academia. Some of it because they view it as unlikely to happen but others because the institutions don't foster an environment where they feel they can research and write based on what they believe.
"He also has many posts against regulations that homogenize jurisdictions specifically because he believes that the most effective governance is to allow localities to be different and people to “foot vote”."
Except that he actively wants to homogenize areas in terms of zoning. Which everybody knows would have the effect of destroying the highly popular single family housing neighborhoods.
Side note. No matter the topic, “Which everybody knows…” is the Bellmore 1st Commandment, the sacred precept on which the rest of his theological writing depends.
That was my point - he says "don't homogenize" but offers nothing to stop that from happening and has been unable to keep that from happening even in his own chosen field - an area where he presumably has the most influence. If he can't make "don't homogenize" practical in the comparatively small community of legal academia, what hope do the rest of us have of making it practical in our much larger communities? Ultimately, if "don't homogenize" is not practical, then foot-voting won't be practical either.
By the way, avoiding the profession entirely isn't really "foot-voting". The housing equivalent would be to never establish residency anywhere - impractical and functionally illegal.
It's been happening in the sciences as well. Conservatives disproportionately get their bachelors and leave for industry while liberals stay for advanced degrees and academia. The discrepancy is at least partially fueled by ideals (the engineer in his plant putting food on the table is a conservative ideal compared to the liberal ideal of the scientist in his lab working to help all mankind), but politics has exacerbated it, so conservatives feel unwelcome in higher academia.
Meh. Yes, it's been well-studied and well-documented that the more educated you are; the more likely you are to be on the liberal/Democratic side of things. I expect that any field that hands out doctorates will equally skew (maybe some specializations in medicine attract conservatives??). But in terms of liberals influencing social policy? Yes, lots of lawyers run for political office. But, almost none of them are law professors.
On the other hand, with the overwhelming number of military members; the number who leave the service and then go into politics must dwarf the number of former law professors. Maybe we should instead focus on getting diversity of ideology/thought/politics into the military, as that would have a far more profound effect on our political bodies and political thought?
You seem to think that liberal law professors have little effect on politics by not being represented among elected officials when it is their evil spawn (lawyers) who are over represented and do the dirty work.
Eh...
Take a look at the following paper.
https://academic.oup.com/jla/article/8/2/277/2502548
"Maybe we should instead focus on getting diversity of ideology/thought/politics into the military"
The Biden admin is already doing everything they can to drive conservatives from the military, and to convince others not to join. The problem is liberals predictably aren't picking up the slack, so we just end up weaker militarily. I hope all the equity works out for you.
Okay, I'll bite. What has Biden been doing to the military to drive conservatives away? (Not rhetorical...I genuinely don't know.) I get that gay people have been allowed to risk their lives in military service while not being in the closet, and I can see how this might make some snowflake conservatives avoid the military. But I have a sense that you're talking about something (some things??) else, yes?
Using precious military healthcare dollars that could be spent on real medical conditions for “Sexual Reassignment Surgery” (Nice way of saying cutting off/out perfectly healthy Dicks/Balls/Tits/Uteri/Ovaries) Oh yeah, who deploys to the various Shitholes when the “Member” who got their “Member(s)” cut off is non-deployable?
Frank
I was career enlisted military (SMSgt (ret) USAF), before going on to a second career in IT Security. I regularly post at a number of military sites, partly out of interest in the topic of the moment but also feeling an obligation to counter a stereotype, to demonstrate that not all old male, white retired SNCOs view the world the same (their view is, by a large majority, substantially the exact "diversity of ideology/thought/politics" you follow).
I loved my old comrades as brothers, admired their abilities and inventiveness, and would (and sometimes did) trust them with my life. But there are very few I would have granted higher-level command.
In most cases I'm glad they had no vote on our unit's military strategy, or other topics requiring a nuanced perception of ambiguous facts, or accurate predictions of long-term consequences. And still today, too many with not enough to do in retirement, demonstrate a MAGA-obsessive emotional attachment to a simple black-and-white cartoon world ruled over by an authoritarian daddy-figure.
Except for the 'admired' part, that's pretty much how I feel about, say, Tommy Tuberville and for that matter, Donald Trump. I trusted my fellow SNCOs as warfighters, but Donald or Tommy? Not in a million years. Because their actions demonstrate a Dunning-Kruger-scale unfounded belief in their own knowledge and abilities, both would have been complete failures as SNCOs, let alone as a Senator evaluating military capabilities, or a Commander in Chief.
Tommy/Donald diversity is not what our military needs.
"Meh. Yes, it’s been well-studied and well-documented that the more educated you are"
It's indoctrinated not "educated".
It's true but I suspect the primary driver is inverse correlation. In most fields, the only purpose of getting a doctorate is to teach in academia, which is famously hostile to conservatives.
On the other hand, conservatives are more likely to want to work in industry, where doctorates are less valued. The Bachelors Engineer (possibly with a later MBA) is hugely common among conservatives.
"the more educated you are; the more likely you are to be on the liberal/Democratic side of things."
Other way around.
The more leftist you are, the more likely you are to spend your time collecting credentials that are often useless or unapplied but that make you feel superior and serve to shore up the momentous effort needed sustain delusional beliefs, rather than being productive and doing normal life.
ML: 'doing normal life.'
My dude...You don't do normal life so good yourself.
Not many on here do.
Because normal life isn't a thing.
One party supports the rule of law, one party attacks it at every opportunity. I wonder which party will get the support of law professors...
One party uses the law as a weapon. No surprise that lawyers favor them. But pendulums swing both ways.
When, in the whole history of the USA, has the law NOT be used as a weapon by one group or another against another group?
Nothing new here. As long as MY group is using the law, great. IF the other group(s) use the law to do things I do not like, well that is using the law as a weapon.
"One party supports the rule of law,"
-The Conservatives
"one party attacks it at every opportunity."
-The Liberals
" I wonder which party will get the support of law professors"
-The Liberals. They enjoy attacking the law, in order to twist it to achieve their goals.
Your world is a not very good Children’s book.
“One party supports the rule of law,”
-The Conservatives
Hence the GOP's criticism of the Jan 6 riot and their willingness to see perpetrators punished.,
Conservatives have no problem with criminals being punished.
The excessive amount seems a bit much. And the quite unequal enforcement of laws is duly noted.
In Henry VI, Part II, Shakespeare had an interesting take on that:
...but it's not the take most people assume.
It’s spoken by the character Dick the Butcher in Act IV, Scene II. Watch the play and you'll notice Dick is a villain, part of an aggressively anti-intellectual group in rebellion against King Henry. They burn any documents or books they find, and kill anyone displaying literacy (both issues of some concern to lawyers).
There are a couple contradictory readings of the sentiment but the most broadly accepted seems the one captured by Justice John Paul Stevens in a 1985 SCOTUS decision:
Irrespective of the characteristics or morals of lawyers in a specific legal system, consensus is that the line’s intent is to imply the importance of a fair rule of law that protects all the people, a concern that is demonstrably unshared by in nearly a decade of Trumpworld.
How many Democrat's support the rule of law on illegal immigration?
Maybe Lincoln Riley??
What is rule of law here?
I'm quite sure a dude called 'White Pride' has no idea and doesn't really care to learn.
Wasn't Trump slapped down by the Court for a number of his anti-immigrant measures. Or is that not against the rule of law because you like it?
When the modern marketplace of ideas speaks, conservatives get cranky and reach for the affirmative action button.
Black men will put Michigan/Wisconsin/PA /GA in 45’s column in November. When you go from 0.2% or whatever it was for Willard Romeney to 10-12%, that's a Yuge! increase. Maybe Sleepy J can get "Corn Pop" to cam-pain for him
Frank
True dat. This sounds an awful like affirmative action
In a post about political donations by law professors, Ilya somehow managed to shoe-horn in the fact that he has never voted for Trump. +5 social credit points
He knows his State Dept handlers monitor his online activity.
To be fair; I think a lot of Germans 80-odd years ago can empathize . . . there are some political leaders SO vile that you want to make it crystal-clear that you didn't support them.
(And, no; internet theatrics notwithstanding, Trump is, of course, a million miles away from Hitler in terms of evilness. It's just that I've never Godwin'd before, and it's been on my bucket list to do.)
I'm not saying Trump is Hitler but...Hitler.
What would he have thought of a strong man rolling tanks through Europe?
I believe the word he used was "genius".
Indeed Trump isn't Hitler - but I wonder how many Trump supporters would vote for a candidate who was much closer to Hitler. I do not think it's an insignificant number.
It is not happenstance that most Trump supporters are among the disrespected, disaffected losers of modern America's culture war.
Hypothetical outrages are truly outrageous.
I expressed no outrage. I note that you didn't actually disagree. Perhaps you realise that I may be right but you prefer that the issue not be discussed.
Well, even Hitler didn't start out as bad as Hitler.
Hitler also had a distinct age advantage on Trump. Trump may never get around to the concentration/murder camp phase (even after executing the promised mass-deportation and likely Krystallnacht phase).
"even Hitler didn’t start out as bad as Hitler."
For all I know he was an angel in knee pants, but he didn't let any moss grow once he had power. He was appointed chancellor on 30Jan, and opened Dachau on the 22nd of March, so something like 7 weeks.
The arrests of political opponents started sooner, of course - they were held in temporary locations prior to the camp being ready.
The photo caption says "A.E. Houseman plays Harvard law Prof. Kingsfield in the classic 1973 movie, The Paper Chase."
The movie starred actor John Houseman, not dead poet A. E. Housman.
Sharp eye for detail.
A preposterous movie.
When I saw it I was not a lawyer nor in law school nor did I even know any lawyers. But I thought it was a hokey Hollywood view of law school and when years later I was actually in law school I realized I was correct.
Since I (and my entire family) knew no lawyers before I went to law school, I had only movies and books to rely upon. So, in the summer before law school; I watched the movie and the entire TV series of "The Paper Chase," and read "1-L" as well.
I showed up at law school, hoping for this really intense learning environment, where professors would bully us students, using the Socratic Method to strip away our feeble defenses. Really. I was excited at the prospect of a merciless classroom--before law school; both my undergrad and my grad schools were really friendly. I show up, at UCLAW, for my first day, only to discover that the school had a "no-fault" pass...if a prof called on you, you could just say, "Pass" with no impact. I felt a bit cheated. And, certainly, tons of students were unprepared in class, and other students like EV were completely on top of things from Day One.
I don’t remember any “pass” classes, but my experience matches yours. As for Socratic method I had one professor who used it and it was a disaster. It was his first year as a law professor and I suppose he felt he had to act that way. Socratic works only if the class already basically understands the material. But most professors are not faced with that situation.
Law school was, though, an intense experience. For the first time (and last time) in my life I was surrounded by smart high achieving people and I had a great time, absorbing the atmosphere like a sponge, a field of learning I had never been exposed to before, and I didn’t care if my grades sucked. Learning to be a good lawyer, and getting good grades in law school, are much different endeavors.
Good call! When I saw the caption, I thought of the poet and something didn't jive. I had to research it.
Smells like rent-seeking behavior to me
How so?
Democrats support new interpretations of laws, overturning years of practice - so the professors have something new to talk about. Also, more confusion requires more lawyers to settle it.
If Musk were smart (and he is) he should bar any lawyer from setting foot on Mars.
Democrats support new interpretations of laws, overturning years of practice
Wait, what???
The Living Constitution.
Republicans, especially these days, support new interpretations of laws and overturning years of practice, just in favor of things you like so it's cool with you.
There are incrementalists and radicals on both sides of the aisle and everywhere in between, and both are quite well represented in the legal profession.
Lawyers are scheduled to fly with the Telephone Sanitizers.
Ah, yes. In the Golden Age of Conspiracy, law professors must overturn law in order to have something to teach in class and creat more work. “Occam’s Razor be damned!” says he.
They support filling America up with worthless third world migrants. You should love them.
The Haitian migrants will love Americans, preferably barbecued.
What Shakespeare said about Lawyers.
Cute. But in context, I don’t think that quote says what you think it’s saying…
Shouldn't Parkinsonian Joe saying UCLA Head Foo-bawl Coach Lincoln Riley was "Killed by an Illegal" ("killed"? shouldn't he have said "Murdered"?) be grounds for immediate invoking of the 25th Amendment if the Cabinet had any sense of decency? Don't they care? Don't they even care? Pooty-Poot just came out and said he's considering Nuking us if umm, we "threaten Russian Sovereignty" and we've got this Drooling Fuck answering the "Red Phone"?? Even Pete Booty-Judge would be an improvement.
Frank
Lawyers support the party that’s likely to make more laws that require litigation.
Republicans at the moment fucking love legislating from the bench and writing all sorts of new laws.
Don't pretend to be the part of small government anymore.
If party R gives you X new laws and party D gives you 2X to 3X new laws, which one gives you more?
See also the explosive growth in regulation under Democrat presidents.
You are just making things up. The Federal register continues to grow under both parties.
Yep. Ol' Michael P used to be smart here. Now he just spouts nonsense and hyperbole.
Contributing to Jeff Flake certainly conveys a message.
Defined as "anti-Trump Republican". Nothing left unsaid.
Conservatives have been anti-intellectual (and anti-factual investigation) for years. This finding does not surprise me.
But, as recently as 25 years ago, the numbers were much more balanced. Most fields were near parity, and the STEM majors actually trended conservative.
What actually happened was that the Republicans winning the '94 election after a long period of being out of power caused left-wing academics to flip from viewing their conservative colleagues as harmless eccentrics, to viewing them as dangerous extremists; They could actually end up in power, their ideas could actually get implemented!
So they leveraged their modest majorities at most institutions to take control of hiring and tenure decisions, and instituted a purge by attrition.
Now, 25 years later, we look at an academia where conservatives are extremely rare, because the ones who were in place back then have mostly aged out, and systematically not been replaced. The purge is nearly complete.
And people like you pretend the result of this purge is proof that conservatives are anti-intellectual. When the truth is just that being identifiably conservative basically guarantees that you can't get hired or get tenure at most institutions, regardless of your academic merits.
You continue to have no proof for this nationwide conspiracy theory.
I continue to provide evidence. The 'Red scare' didn't have a fraction as much impact on the political composition of academia as the left' ongoing purge of conservatives has had.
The political composition of a whole industry can't change that dramatically, that fast, without a lot of hard work.
I continue to provide evidence.
But your prior post contained no evidence at all.
I could just as easily say that the rise of conservative think tanks and the growing salary gap between academia and commerce attracted conservative academics who previously would have been content on a professor's salary.
I provided as much evidence as you did.
Your evidence, Brett, is your usual 'trend went up. I think it went up too fast and too far, so I've invented a new cause.'
For folks who don't know, Brett believes there is a nationwide conspiracy. He thinks it's not just snobbery or a cultural bias that conservatives are not 'a good fit', or even an assumption that conservative scholarship is less worthy. He thinks there is a nationwide conspiracy in universities across the US to target conservative faculty for elimination in some vast conspiracy above and beyond such cultural concerns.
[I believe the cultural things are happening, and that's why I favor affirmative action for conservative academics.]
Gaslighto, exactly what is the difference between saying "No Niggers Allowed" and having such a racially hostile atmosphere that the students of color choose not to attend?
Like the Florida's public university system under DeSantis?
[Side Note: Ed really felt a thrill run up his leg, writing that forbidden transgressive text. It's what he lives for.]
Your old "it's a conspiracy theory" convinces no one. It is just a knee-jerk reaction to the name Bellmore on a comment.
Try some hard facts for a change.
Hey Don, when someone says 'purge of conservatives' and provides *no proof*, that shit is a conspiracy. Insisting he totally provided proof is also not a good sign.
Your contrarianism against my comments continues to hurt your credibility.
SO sure, throw in with Brett. That's a dude who is totally free of paranoia and conspiracies. Good luck defending his flights of telepathy and liberal hive minds.
" when someone says ‘purge of conservatives’ and provides *no proof*, that shit is a conspiracy. "
Brett does like him some inflammatory rhetoric, but what's your reaction if the situation was "From the 1950's to the present, the percentage of female professors in history departments declined from 50% to 5%"? That's a pretty big shift.
Just a random walk of the numbers? Men are just smarter than women and the numbers show meritocracy in action? Female history buffs just decided they could make more money on Youtube? Or maybe there is a whiff of systematic discrimination?
I agree people shouldn't jump to conspricay theories. For example, when "women on the average earn 70% of what men do" comes up, some people don't seem interested in nuanced explanations like "women choose to work less hours" or "when kids come, more women then men choose to take a few years off to raise the kids". At least some jump right to "it's just gotta be a patriarchal conspiracy", and I agree with you that that's wrong.
So what are some of the benign explanations you see for the political shift in academia?
During the same time once all-male Education departments have become almost all female.
As I posted 2 hours ago: 'I believe the cultural things are happening, and that’s why I favor affirmative action for conservative academics.'
It is a big shift. It is certainly a problem. But you exclude the middle if you think it's either benign or an intentional, coordinated purge.
Brett is just partisan demonizing.
I think you and I agree, actually.
Fact: The more conservatives on a faculty, the shittier that school tends to be.
There is a reason conservatives have not responded to this ostensible market failure by building strong law schools (or universities) with undervalued conservative faculties. Conservatives do not wish to discuss the reason(s) conservative schools are strongly inferior to mainstream, liberal-libertarian schools. Conservatives do not wish to acknowledge, discuss, or address these reasons.
Carry on, clingers. So far as better Americans permit, and so far as stale, ugly thinking could carry anyone in modern, improving, glorious America, which continues to progress against conservative efforts and preferences.
There is a reason conservatives have not responded to this ostensible market failure by building strong law schools (or universities) with undervalued conservative faculties.
Accreditation monopolies wouldn't have anything to do with this, would it?
'94 was 34 years ago, but it was more the 1991 Gulf War that most of the students supported -- 94% at UMass Amherst -- and it freaked out those who had come of age protesting Vietnam 20-25 years earlier. So they volunteered for not just hiring and tenure but (more importantly) graduate admissions committees.
That is when the skew to the left began....
I suggest a much more simple solution. Conservatives feel unwelcome in academia.
To compare, churches are among the most segregated institutions in America. When a church becomes lopsided to one race, no one want to be the "one black speck". I have never in my life seen any racial hostility in any church I've attended, but almost all of them were over 90% monoracial.
Would you expect to see racial hostility in 90+% monoracial churches? If so, why?
"However, my wife reminds me..."
The spousal reminder giveth, and the spousal reminder taketh away.
Wow, no one is even mentioning the elephant in the room: tort reform. It’s all about the money.
Lawyers donate far more to Democrats because Republicans are more likely to support measures to cap the lottery sized pain and suffering damages in civil litigation (like E Jean Carroll being awarded a ludicrous $88 million because Trump called her “crazy”). Since trial lawyers get a cut of those awards, up to 40% – capping damages directly hits their bottom line.
The most notable of these attorneys was the infamous Richard F. “Dickie” Scruggs, who made billions through contingency fees off dubious cases like lawsuits against Big Tobacco. And he overwhelmingly donated to Democrats.
John Edwards, a Democrat, also made millions off of lawsuits involving "shaken baby syndrome" using studies that were later discredited.
How does self-interest on the part of trial lawyers explain the behavior of classroom lawyers?
1. Because they still want to expand the power base of their profession
2. Some of them do civil litigation on the side or plan to someday
3. Some of them were active trial lawyers before they became professors, and they want to justify how they became wealthy
4. It’s the big law money that comes back to donate into law schools
5. (Most relevant) They bought into trial lawyer propaganda that trial lawyers are fighting for “the little guy”, while Republicans are trying to curtail the right of poor people to sue
Quit whining.
And the connection to "law professors" is...?
See my response to Voize
Affirmative action for conservatives in academia would take advantage of all the experience we have in similar programs for immutable characteristics - it shouldn't be a quota, but more a thumb on the scales.
It's also tricky to draw the line on what counts as conservative, and which disciplines would benefit from that perspective.
And whether this should be affirmative action for conservatives or just a more generalized heterodox voices kinda thing.
I'm not sure but it could include some dedicated supportive or cohort-based integration infrastructure to try and make them less likely to feel unwelcome.
By temperament, I’m a natural Conservative of the type who believes in the importance of institutionalism; a communitarianism surviving individuals; delayed gratification; and exhibiting humility about what we do not—and perhaps cannot—know.
Also, I’m old, white, male, born and raised in a religious-conservative family in rural Idaho (voted for Richard Nixon in 1972 when voting was permitted at 18 for the first time), then career enlisted military (SMSgt (ret) USAF), and finally retired from a second career in IT Security for a Fortune 50 company. Given all that, you’d be forgiven for assuming I’m the standard Republican reflected in the Ilya’s thoughtful and nuanced piece.
Likely would have made a decent Eisenhower Republican. But over the decades of the GOP’s long, sad devolution—starting from Nixon’s Southern Strategy (something I’d never heard of at 18), to this century’s full dependence on the votes of the obsessed populists of their racist/xenophobic wing— there came a point when supporting the Republican Party became impossible.*
So I’m an Independent who, though my political contributions are negligible, since the 1980’s has been unable to vote for any national Republican (more precisely, since GHW Bush’s reelection attempt). So, it doesn’t surprise me that for similar reasons, law professor contributions tend similarly Democratic no matter their by temperament tendencies.
This all started way before Trump, but the last decade’s Trumpism has greatly accelerated the GOP’s journey from a political party interested in sustaining and managing—that is, conserving—a societal-consensus classical western liberalism, into today’s populist cultural movement characterized by the resentment, envy, greed, fear, and rage of its base. How could I ever vote for that?
So, Conservative? Perhaps, per an Eisenhower-era definition. Neither Democrat nor Progressive, however, I’ll accept the noun, Liberal, as opposed to its opposite—the thing many self-proclaimed conservatives by their actions demonstrate themselves to be—the adjective, illiberal.
I long for the return within my lifetime of a thoughtful, rational conservative party. It just seems incredibly unlikely it will be the GOP.
(*Also because of R’s unfortunate attraction to theocratic authoritarianism and abandonment of evidence-based decision-making—the last perhaps a root cause of the other two.)
I share your doubt that the current Republican Party is likely to ditch the bigotry, ignorance, superstition, and disaffectedness anytime soon. The legitimate traditional preferences of Republicans -- competence, education, reason, civic responsibility, tolerance, economic development, progress -- are mocked by the most influential elements of today's movement conservatism.
I long for the return within my lifetime of a thoughtful, rational conservative party. It just seems incredibly unlikely it will be the GOP.
And in the other corner, you have the party of open borders, defund the police, men can become women, BLM, Antifa, slavery reparations, white people bad, and stripper drag queens in schools.
I'm not a total fan of either party, but when I compare the craziness, it's no contest.
Has anyone looked into the political contributions of dentists? Car dealers? Insurance professionals? Cops?