#iufb reached college football immortality Monday night, as the Hoosiers earned their first national championship with their victory over Miami.
Indiana finished the 2025 season a perfect 16-0 as the national champions.
https://t.co/1IBlEm2vLD
Indiana Daily Student photographers are capturing the anticipation across Bloomington ahead of Indiana football's national championship game Monday night. See their photos:
https://t.co/F3KJ7AVLtY
IU previously directed the Indiana Daily Student to stop printing news coverage in our paper. Upon pushback, IU fully cut print, including our special editions. The IDS was not involved in the decision. Letter from the editors to come.
Subnational public opinion is important to many things we care about: learning what policies people want! assessing representation! But it's hard with historical data because of survey sampling challenges. My new paper at @SPPQJournal shows how we can update MRP to do just that.
Great to see this paper out! In it we document the rise of the culture wars as a dominant divide in American politics. In particular, we find that it was the *state* parties that first polarized on abortion, well before national parties acted on the issue.
New First View! The Culture War and Partisan Polarization: State Political Parties, 1960–2018 | Studies in American Political Development https://t.co/BrKUfyDfbp @GeraldGamm Justin Phillips, Matthew Carr, and @michaelauslen
So this news from Gannett may be good news for democratic representation in these states, though perhaps less so if they are simply replacing reporters laid off months or years ago with fellows on short-term contracts (which I have no information about) https://t.co/2iNabLlUx1
Interesting move by Gannett (which has over several years dramatically reduced the number of reporters in its newsrooms) to hire reporters to cover state politics--though seemingly in capitals where they do not on the paper.
In a working paper, I find that when state legislators are more likely to be covered by the press, they are more responsive to their constituents' preferences. https://t.co/2mBuU6wzxm
BUT, surprisingly, the public is *not* more informed or engaged in districts where legislators are more likely to be covered. Instead, the presence of journalists as watchdog monitors in the state capitol likely changes politicians' incentives to represent constituents well.
Interesting move by Gannett (which has over several years dramatically reduced the number of reporters in its newsrooms) to hire reporters to cover state politics--though seemingly in capitals where they do not on the paper.
"These full-time fellowships run from November 2023 to December 2024, and the roles are benefits eligible. We're looking for enterprising and scoop-driven reporters who are eager to write explanatory and informative journalism for a statewide and national audience." ⤵️
A Gannett paper with 0 reporters:
"The lack of local reporting has drawn complaints from the mayor, a county supervisor and everyday citizens who say the public life of their community has been diminished by the lack of a dependable source of local news."
https://t.co/3X3xG0squm