Intel Chain
# The Decline of Split-Ticket Voting in U.S. Elections Between 1980 and 2020, the percentage of Americans voting for different parties across federal offices dropped from 26% to under 5%. This metric—split-ticket voting—historically served as a brake on partisan polarization and legislative gridlock. The collapse reflects increasingly straight-party voting patterns driven by cable media sorting, social media algorithmic reinforcement, and geographic self-sorting by ideology. The shift matters because it eliminates the moderating cross-party accountability mechanism; representatives no longer fear voters splitting their ballot, eliminating incentives for compromise and making primary elections (which favor ideological extremes) more consequential than general elections for determining actual policy outcomes.
Evidence Chain (1 linked intel)
This investigation is a collaboration between Bellingcat and Colombian media outlet Cerosetenta. You can read Cerosetenta’s piece in Spanish here. A video posted on Feb. 26 shows several men painting over graffiti in Restrepo, a neighbourhood in Bogota, Colombia, and replacing them with images of their own: a logo used by Colombian political candidate and […] The post Unearthing a Colombian Politician’s Connections to Neo-Nazi Active Club Group appeared first on bellingcat . Source: bellingcat
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