Political Storms: Emergent Partisan Skepticism of Hurricane Risks

39 Pages Posted: 14 Mar 2019 Last revised: 2 Nov 2019

See all articles by Elisa Long

Elisa Long

University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) - Anderson School of Management

M. Keith Chen

University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) - Anderson School of Management

Ryne Rohla

Washington State University

Date Written: October 14, 2019

Abstract

The 2017 hurricane season devastated the U.S. gulf coast with two of the worst hurricanes in history: Harvey (107 deaths, $125B in damages) and Irma (134 deaths, $50B in damages). Despite extensive warnings, most affected residents did not evacuate their homes before the storms hit, complicating rescue and recovery efforts. Combining a large GPS dataset for 2.7 million smartphone users in Florida and Texas with U.S. Census demographic data and 2016 U.S. Presidential election precinct-level results, we empirically examine hurricane evacuation behavior. A difference-in-differences analysis demonstrates that Trump/Clinton vote share strongly predicts evacuation rates, but only after the emergence of conservative-media dismissals of hurricane warnings in September 2017, just before Irma made landfall in Florida. Following this viral "hurricane trutherism", we estimate that Trump-voting Florida residents were 10-11% less likely to evacuate Irma than Clinton-voters (34% vs. 45%) after controlling for key demographic and geographic covariates, highlighting one consequence of political polarization. This effect size is similar in magnitude to that of an official hurricane watch. We confirm the causal impact of hurricane advisories using a spatial regression-discontinuity design that compares evacuation rates for residents living just on opposite sides of county boundaries who received differential alerts. A hurricane watch causally increases rapid evacuations (within 24 hours) by 6 percentage-points compared to no watch, and by 4 percentage-points compared to a tropical storm watch.

Keywords: Hurricane Evacuations, Fake News, Political Polarization, Regression Discontinuity

Suggested Citation

Long, Elisa and Chen, Keith and Rohla, Ryne, Political Storms: Emergent Partisan Skepticism of Hurricane Risks (October 14, 2019). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3339723 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3339723

Elisa Long (Contact Author)

University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) - Anderson School of Management ( email )

110 Westwood Plaza
Los Angeles, CA 90095-1481
United States

Keith Chen

University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) - Anderson School of Management ( email )

110 Westwood Plaza
Los Angeles, CA 90095-1481
United States

HOME PAGE: http://www.anderson.ucla.edu/faculty/keith.chen/index.html

Ryne Rohla

Washington State University ( email )

P.O. Box 646210
Hulbert Hall 101
Pullman, WA 99164-6210
United States

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