Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
Newsletters
Press
Donate
My Account
Read our research on:
Congress
|
Economy
|
Gender
Research Topics
All Publications
Methods
Short Reads
Tools & Resources
Experts
About
Topics
Politics & Policy
International Affairs
Immigration & Migration
Race & Ethnicity
Religion
Generations & Age
Gender & LGBTQ
Family & Relationships
Economy & Work
Science
Internet & Technology
News Habits & Media
Methodological Research
Full topic list
Regions & Countries
Asia & the Pacific
Europe & Russia
Latin America
Middle East & North Africa
North America
Sub-Saharan Africa
Multiple Regions / Worldwide
Formats
Features
Fact Sheets
Videos
Data Essays
Research Topics
Topics
Politics & Policy
International Affairs
Immigration & Migration
Race & Ethnicity
Religion
Generations & Age
Gender & LGBTQ
Family & Relationships
Economy & Work
Science
Internet & Technology
News Habits & Media
Methodological Research
Full topic list
Regions & Countries
Asia & the Pacific
Europe & Russia
Latin America
Middle East & North Africa
North America
Sub-Saharan Africa
Multiple Regions / Worldwide
Formats
Features
Fact Sheets
Videos
Data Essays
All Publications
Methods
Short Reads
Tools & Resources
Experts
About
My Account
DONATE
Read our research on:
Congress
|
Economy
|
Gender
Home
Research Topics
Internet & Technology
Platforms & Services
Entertainment
Music
Pew Research Center
April 7, 2015
A Deep Dive Into Party Affiliation
PP_15.04.07_sidebar1992_2014_2
←
Prev Page
Page
2
Page
3
Page
4
Page
5
Page
6
Page
7
Page
8
Page
9
Page
10
Page
11
Page
12
Next Page
→
Download
PP_15.04.07_sidebar1992_2014_2
Embed
Post Infographics
A Deep Dive Into Party Affiliation
Share of Political Independents Continues to Increase
Gender Gap in Party Identification Persists
More Whites Lean Republican Than in 2009; Blacks Overwhelmingly Align with Democratic Party
More College Graduates Lean Democratic
Democrats’ Growing Advantage in Party Identification Among Post-Grads
Generation Gap in Partisan Affiliation
White Millennials Are Divided in Partisan Leanings; Older Generations of Whites Lean Republican
White Evangelicals Increasingly Lean Republican
Partisan Affiliation Among Catholics Little Changed
Mormons Remain Solidly Republican; Jews and Religiously Unaffiliated Lean Democratic
Strong Groups for the Democratic and Republican Parties
About the Party Identification Database
Copyright 2023 Pew Research Center
About
Terms & Conditions
Privacy Policy
Reprints, Permissions & Use Policy
Feedback
Careers