Monkey Cage: The growing politicization of Santa Claus

Santas cross the street while marching through Midtown Manhattan during the Volunteers of Americas 110th Annual Sidewalk Santa Parade in New York on Nov. 23, 2012. (Brendan McDermid/Reuters)

My Post colleagues Philip Bump and Chris Cillizza recently asked a group of politicos whether Santa was a Democrat or Republican. They gave predictably partisan answers, with tongue firmly in cheek (I hope).

We can add to that by considering some public opinion data that my co-blogger Joshua Tucker and political scientist Will Jennings highlighted in 2012. Three polls have asked some version of a question about Santas partisanship. Here are the results.

The graph suggests that a smaller number of people are saying that Santa is an independent or something else (usually people just say they dont know or arent sure), and a larger number of people saying that Santa is either a Democrat or Republican.

The main caveat, however, is that in 2012, the survey question did not explicitly give independent as an option, listing only Democrat, Republican or something else. So it is possible that the 2012 poll may exaggerate any politicization. And, of course, there is the usual caveat of trying to extract a meaningful trend across only threepolls.

Nevertheless, the potential for a trend is intriguing and in line with other research that shows a growing salience of partisanship, even in non-political contexts.

Meanwhile, across the pond, Jennings reports on a 2013 poll in England about the partisan preference of Father Christmas, who appears to lean left:

John Sides is an Associate Professor of Political Science at George Washington University. He specializes in public opinion, voting, and American elections.

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Monkey Cage: The growing politicization of Santa Claus

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