Targeted Campaign Appeals and the Value of Ambiguity
Political campaigns increasingly micro-target. Given detailed knowledge of voters’ identities, campaigns try to persuade voters by pandering to these identities. Through multiple survey experiments, we examine the persuasiveness of group-directed pandering. We ask: Do group members respond more favo...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of politics 2013-04, Vol.75 (2), p.520-534 |
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container_title | The Journal of politics |
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creator | Hersh, Eitan D. Schaffner, Brian F. |
description | Political campaigns increasingly micro-target. Given detailed knowledge of voters’ identities, campaigns try to persuade voters by pandering to these identities. Through multiple survey experiments, we examine the persuasiveness of group-directed pandering. We ask: Do group members respond more favorably to appeals geared to them, or do they prefer broad-based appeals? Do voters not in a group penalize candidates who appeal to a group? Answers to these questions help us grapple with the evolving relationship between voters and candidates in a rapidly changing information environment. Our results suggest that voters rarely prefer targeted pandering to general messages and that “mistargeted” voters penalize candidates enough to erase the positive returns to targeting. Theoretically, targeting may allow candidates to quietly promise particularistic benefits to narrow audiences, thereby altering the nature of political representation, but voters seem to prefer being solicited based on broad principles and collective benefits. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1017/S0022381613000182 |
format | Article |
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subjects | Audience Audiences Candidates Christianity Collectives Electoral behaviour Electoral campaigning Experiments Hispanics Identity Political behavior Political Campaigns Political candidates Political identity Political pandering Political parties Political Representation Political science Politicians Voters Voting Voting Behavior Voting behaviour |
title | Targeted Campaign Appeals and the Value of Ambiguity |
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