By Steve Sailer
11/06/2014
width="400"Crowdpac’s graph of donations to candidate by industry of employer
From Business Insider:
Crowdpac, a non-partisan firm dedicated to political data analysis, used federal campaign contribution records dating back to 1980 in order to estimate where various officials and donors fall on the political spectrum. They scored individual donors as being more liberal or conservative based on what kinds of candidates they gave to.So, the four businesses that serve as the Engineers of Human Souls — entertainment, academia, Google-type tech, and the print media — are each significantly more liberal than any industries are conservative, even mining and agriculture (and the gypsum and sorghum industries aren’t exactly leaders of fashion).The company’s CEO and co-founder, Steve Hilton, told Business Insider this donation data “is the heart of the Crowdpac data model” because their “research shows that campaign contributions are the best predictor of how a candidate will behave in office.” …
As part of their analysis, Crowdpac is also able to break down where various professions fall on the political spectrum. They provided that data to Business Insider.
Here’s an ancient article I wrote on movie star donations to campaigns.Liberal Professions
Some of the professional groups have clear liberal leanings. People who work in the news media are almost exclusively donors to liberal candidates:Crowdpac
Donors in the entertainment industry are similarly liberal:
Crowdpac
Academics also tend to give to liberal candidates:
Crowdpac
The tech industry has a decidedly liberal bent as well:
Crowdpac
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