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Partisan Affect and
Elite
Polarization
DIERMEIER, DANIEL ; LI, CHRISTOPHER
The American political science review, 2019-02, Vol.113 (1), p.277-281
[Periódico revisado por pares]
New York, USA: Cambridge University Press
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Título:
Partisan Affect and
Elite
Polarization
Autor:
DIERMEIER, DANIEL
;
LI, CHRISTOPHER
Assuntos:
Attitudes
;
Behavioral Science Research
;
Behavioral
Sciences
;
Bias
;
Classical Languages
;
Congressional elections
;
Election results
;
Elections
;
Emotional Response
;
Group Membership
;
Ideology
;
Influence
;
Negative Attitudes
;
Partisanship
;
Polarization
;
Political parties
;
Political science
;
Politics
;
Preferences
;
Psychological Patterns
;
Random variables
;
Rational choice
;
Resistance (Psychology)
;
Responsiveness
;
Social
psychology
;
Voter behavior
;
Voters
;
Voting
É parte de:
The American political science review, 2019-02, Vol.113 (1), p.277-281
Descrição:
We examine the interaction between partisan affect and
elite
polarization in a behavioral voting model. Voting is determined by affect rather than rational choice. Parties are office-motivated; they choose policies to win elections. We show that parties bias their policies toward their partisans if voters exhibit ingroup responsiveness, i.e., they respond more strongly to their own party’s policy deviations than to policy deviations by the other party. Our results suggest that affective polarization is a driver of the growing
elite
polarization in American politics. Importantly, this observation does not assume any shifts in the voters’ bliss points and is therefore orthogonal to the controversy over whether the American electorate has become more polarized in ideology.
Editor:
New York, USA: Cambridge University Press
Idioma:
Inglês
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