I'm interested in the relationship between political views and belief in conspiracy theories, and have had several posts on the issue. In the cases I've looked at, there wasn't much connection, but Matthew Yglesias suggests one is emerging: "Democrats are much more buttoned-up, and the GOP is much more accepting of cranks and know-nothings." (I was reminded by Andrew Gelman's post). It turns out that there is some relevant data: there have been a number of questions about the assassination of John F. Kennedy, first in 1966 and most recently in 2023. The basic form is "do you think that one man was responsible for the assassination of President Kennedy, or do you think that others were involved?" (Some added "in a conspiracy," but that didn't make any clear difference). I'm not saying that believing that others were involved is a "crank" view--I would answer "don't know" to the question about whether more than one person was involved--but the inclination to think that things were or were not the result of a conspiracy is important.
The figure shows the balance of opinion for Democrats and Republicans (I'll get to independents later)--percent choosing "one man" minus percent choosing "others were involved." From 1966 through 2013, Democrats were a little more likely to think that others were involved, but in 2023 they were substantially less likely. Another way to look at it is that between 2013 and 2023, Democrats moved towards thinking that only one person was involved, while Republicans moved towards thinking that more than one was involved. Until then, Democratic and Republican opinions had generally moved in the same direction.
Did partisanship affect the recent change in Democratic opinions, Republican opinions, or both? With things like economic conditions or crime, there are objective measures that you can use as a benchmark. That isn't the case here--the truth is whatever it's been all along--and as far as I know no major new evidence emerged between 2013 and 2023. Between 2003 and 2013, both Democrats and Republicans moved towards thinking that one person was responsible, which may be because as time passes fewer people feel strongly enough to reject the official account. That would suggest that the trend would continue, which it did for Democrats, so that Republicans were the ones affected by partisanship. Another approach would be to take the change among independents as the standard. It's shown here:Like Republicans, they moved back in the direction of "others involved." That suggests that Democrats were more affected by partisanship. So you could argue it either way.
I think that the changes were mostly a matter of people following their party, rather than people shifting between parties because of their general feelings about conspiracy theories. Even though the JFK assassination was not a partisan issue, as Republicans said that the authorities were hiding the truth about the 2020 election and Covid vaccines, Republicans would be more likely to think that they were hiding the truth about other things; on the other side, Democrats would be more likely to think that that challenges to the official account were attacks on expertise. But regardless of whether the shifts were between parties or between parties, a partisan gap has emerged.
[Data from the Roper Center for Public Opinion Research]