197 Episodes

  1. Do moderate voters matter?

    Published: 25/01/2023
  2. Judging Biden and Congress

    Published: 11/01/2023
  3. The influence of Twitter on journalism and politics

    Published: 28/12/2022
  4. How party leaders change Congress

    Published: 14/12/2022
  5. How Early Voting is Changing American Elections

    Published: 30/11/2022
  6. Does the 2022 election show how Democratic campaigns win?

    Published: 16/11/2022
  7. How we connect our political beliefs

    Published: 02/11/2022
  8. When partisanship forms our identity

    Published: 19/10/2022
  9. How Misperceptions and Online Norms Drive “Cancel Culture”

    Published: 05/10/2022
  10. When Information About Candidates Persuades Voters

    Published: 21/09/2022
  11. When Public Opinion Goes to the Ballot Box

    Published: 07/09/2022
  12. How primary elections enable polarized amateurs

    Published: 24/08/2022
  13. Is democracy declining in the American states?

    Published: 10/08/2022
  14. The past and future of polling

    Published: 20/07/2022
  15. Why the baby boomers rule American politics

    Published: 29/06/2022
  16. Did the Birchers win after all?

    Published: 15/06/2022
  17. How much are polls misrepresenting Americans?

    Published: 01/06/2022
  18. Abortion politics take center stage

    Published: 18/05/2022
  19. Women in (and out of) Politics

    Published: 04/05/2022
  20. Did economists move the Democrats to the right?

    Published: 20/04/2022

4 / 10

The Niskanen Center’s The Science of Politics podcast features up-and-coming researchers delivering fresh insights on the big trends driving American politics today. Get beyond punditry to data-driven understanding of today’s Washington with host and political scientist Matt Grossmann. Each 30-45-minute episode covers two new cutting-edge studies and interviews two researchers.

Visit the podcast's native language site