spot_imgspot_img

Maine’s higher ed professors disproportionately Democrats

(The Center Square) – The majority of professors in Maine’s higher education are registered Democrats, with fewer than 6% being Republicans. If professors teach responsibly, political affiliation doesn’t matter; but quite often they don’t, a professor of politics says.

“Only 5.49% of university and college professors working in Maine are registered Republicans,” while 54.63% are registered Democrats, according to an analysis by The Maine Wire.

The missing nearly 40% is made up of several different groups: 20.29% are unregistered, which likely means “non-citizen professors, visiting professors from out of state, and the apolitical,” according to the Maine Wire’s analysis.

And 16.28% are unaffiliated, meaning they “are registered to vote but declined to register explicitly with any party.”

The Green Party, No Labels Party, Libertarian party, and 18 indeterminable professors make up the remaining percentage.

The analysis was conducted “using a combination of publicly available information and a voter information database,” The Maine Wire said.

The analysis included 2,222 lecturers and professors at Maine’s major private institutions – Bowdoin College, Bates College, Colby College, Husson University, Saint Joseph’s College and Thomas College – and all of the publicly funded UMaine system universities, according to The Maine Wire.

With no registered Republican professors, UMaine Law possesses the smallest percentage of conservatives. Meanwhile, The University of Maine at Presque Island has the most Republican professors at 29.41%, The Maine Wire reported. The University of Maine at Machias has the highest amount of registered Democrats at 80%, according to the investigation’s spreadsheet.

When asked why he thinks more Maine professors are Democrat than Republican, Professor of Politics at Sarah Lawrence College and Senior Fellow at the American Enterprise Institute Samuel Abrams told The Center Square on a phone interview that there are many reasons.

“First and foremost, most people who have masters degrees or higher tend to be liberal, left-of-center, or registered [Democrat],” Abrams said.

The self-described center-right professor also said that the disproportionate political makeup is because the higher ed universe possesses “such a strong liberal mono-culture.”

“There are very few spaces for us,” Abrams said. “It is not a secret that people who hold different views are not welcome, are not wanted, and to succeed and to thrive in higher ed is very challenging.”

Being a professor in higher education is “not an easy or obvious career path for people who are not left-of-center, sadly,” Abrams said.

Abrams told The Center Square that possessing a majority of left-leaning professors “doesn’t have to mean that our education is unbalanced at all,” but that it unfortunately often does.

“In and of itself, I could care less if the person is progressive – or extremely conservative, quite frankly – if they teach responsibly,” Abrams said. “Here’s the problem: they don’t.”

Abrams said that in the past, professors valued teaching in a balanced manner. However, today the pervading belief is that “if you’re an academic, you can’t just be impartial.” Instead, “you must be impassioned,” and the thing you’re passionate about is often “social change,” Abrams said.

Abrams told The Center Square that it is important students hear both political sides of an issue for the creation and perfection of ideas. “We become stronger, clearer thinkers when we have to explain ourselves, defend ourselves, and really justify why we think what we think,” Abrams said.

Not talking through both sides of an argument “really undermines what has made [America’s] universities the best in the world for years and what’s made this country so darn prolific and productive over the years,” Abrams said.

If the nation’s students aren’t taught to hear and understand both sides, not only will “weird policy outcomes” potentially happen, but students will be “robots,” not “thinkers,” Abrams said. “They’re not going to be able to keep this tradition of innovation alive, and that really would be a disaster for all of us.”

DON’T MISS OUT

Be the first to know about the latest news, giveaways, events, and updates from The Black Chronicle!

We don’t spam! Read our privacy policy for more info.

spot_imgspot_img
spot_img

Hot this week

African and Caribbean Nations Call for Reparations for Slave Trade, Propose Global Fund

Nations across Africa and the Caribbean, deeply impacted by...

Health care company agrees to pay $22.5 million to settle claims of over billing

A health care company agreed to pay nearly $22.5...

Sports betting expert offers advice on paying taxes for gambling winnings

(The Center Square) – Tax season is underway, and...

Entertainment district benefits don’t outweigh the cost, economists say

(The Center Square) — Weeks later, after more details...

Business association ‘disappointed’ by WA L&I’s proposed workers comp rate hike

(The Center Square) – The Association of Washington Business...

More than 1,000 students signed up for plant-based lunches in Illinois

(The Center Square) – Advocates for more plant-based school...

Ohio unemployment remains steady for second straight month

(The Center Square) – Ohio’s September labor statistics continued...

Report: New York’s police misconduct payouts top $1 billion

(The Center Square) — New York is a national...

$325 million granted to Michigan for polysilicon plant expansion

(The Center Square) – Saginaw-based Hemlock Semiconductor Corp. will...

Order on Louisiana’s Ten Commandments law expected by Nov. 15

(The Center Square) – The U.S. District Court for...

Former Illinois state representatives to testify in Madigan corruption trial

(The Center Square) – Federal prosecutors say three former...

Op-Ed: Iowa poised to revolutionize property tax reform among states

Governing magazine crowned Gov. Kim Reynolds among 2024's leading...

Six indicted for voter fraud in Ohio

(The Center Square) – Six of the nearly 140...

More like this
Related

More than 1,000 students signed up for plant-based lunches in Illinois

(The Center Square) – Advocates for more plant-based school...

Ohio unemployment remains steady for second straight month

(The Center Square) – Ohio’s September labor statistics continued...

Report: New York’s police misconduct payouts top $1 billion

(The Center Square) — New York is a national...

$325 million granted to Michigan for polysilicon plant expansion

(The Center Square) – Saginaw-based Hemlock Semiconductor Corp. will...