
The Vital Center Understanding the diploma divide, with Matt Grossmann and Dave Hopkins
Apr 3, 2025
Joining the discussion are Dave Hopkins, an associate professor at Boston College focusing on political behavior, and Matt Grossmann, a political science professor and director at Michigan State University. They dive into the changing political landscape, emphasizing how college-educated voters increasingly lean toward the Democratic Party, while non-college-educated groups support Republicans. The duo explores the implications of this 'diploma divide', the role of social media in shaping political narratives, and the challenges Democrats face in reconnecting with the working class amidst these cultural shifts.
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Social Change Outlasts Policy Wins
- Matt Grossmann notes cultural shifts like growing LGBT identification continue despite electoral or policy setbacks.
- He cites Gallup trends showing rising identification, especially among younger cohorts.
Local Education Context Amplifies Effects
- Matt Grossmann emphasizes local education context matters: living among college-educated neighbors amplifies the diploma divide.
- He finds these education-context effects persisted and strengthened polarization in 2024.
Two-Party System Intensifies The Divide
- Grossmann argues multi-party democracies let education splits flow into niche parties; the U.S. lacks those outlets.
- He warns the U.S. two-party system forces a remaking of the major parties into opposing edu-cultural coalitions.






