WASHINGTON 鈥 Is the airport in Arlington, Virginia, called 鈥淩eagan,鈥 鈥淣ational,鈥 or it is 鈥淒CA?鈥
聽did the research and found that D.C.-area residents can鈥檛 seem to come to an agreement on the nickname for .
The Washington Post鈥檚 Express conducted an in December, and more than 42,000 people responded with differing responses for the name of the airport, which was formerly named Washington National and changed its name in 1998.
The survey found one major group that avoids the 鈥淩-word鈥 is D.C.-area Democrats. In the survey聽posted online Wednesday, only 35 percent of Democrats call the airport 鈥淩eagan鈥 or 鈥淩eagan National,鈥 compared to 72 percent of Republicans.
The airport鈥檚 name has a divisive history, which has led to disparities in nicknames.
In 1998, then-President Bill Clinton signed legislation to rename the airport to honor the former Republican president. The legislation passed in Congress although the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority opposed it, as did local political leaders.
After the named changed, Metro and the National Park Service were forced to revise signs at the agencies鈥 own expense, The Washington Post reports. The sign changes cost hundreds of thousands of dollars.
鈥淚鈥檓 still mad about the name, because of how it got passed. It got forced upon all the people here by a small group of powerful men in Congress,鈥 Jason West, 57, told the Post.
Chris Sloan, a 50-year-old who identifies himself as a Republican, said he calls the airport 鈥淩eagan.鈥
鈥淚 don鈥檛 call it Reagan because of my political affiliation. I call it Reagan because that鈥檚 the name of the airport,鈥 Sloan told The Post.
The survey found younger generations 鈥 regardless of political affiliation 鈥 are more likely to use 鈥淩eagan鈥 when referring to the airport.
The Post notes it may be because to millennials, “Reagan” literally means “the airport” and doesn’t conjure memories of the former president 鈥 just as “Dulles” may literally mean “the airport in Loudoun County” as opposed to “John Foster Dulles.”
鈥淚 think he was president before I was born,鈥 25-year-old Denzel Thomas said of Ronald Reagan.
Still Thomas tell The Post he says 鈥淒CA鈥 when talking about the airport, “because that鈥檚 easiest to text.鈥
The Post notes the survey sample is made up of those who cared enough to take the online survey. Of the 42,082 respondents, 62 percent were Democrats, 18 percent were Independents, 12 percent were Republicans and 8 percent were other.
Of the respondents, here are the breakdowns of what they call the airport:
- National 鈥 41 percent
- Reagan 鈥 31 percent
- DCA 鈥 13 percent
- Reagan National 鈥 12 percent
鈥淭hose numbers are probably slanted by the underrepresentation of Republicans and out-of-towners in our sample,鈥 the Post notes.
