When Do Voters Punish Corrupt Politicians? Experimental Evidence from a Field and Survey Experiment
When do voters punish corrupt politicians? Heterogeneous views about the importance of corruption can determine whether or not increased information enhances accountability. If partisan cleavages correlate with the importance voters place on corruption, then the consequences of information may vary...
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Veröffentlicht in: | British journal of political science 2023-04, Vol.53 (2), p.728-739 |
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creator | de Figueiredo, Miguel F.P. Hidalgo, F. Daniel Kasahara, Yuri |
description | When do voters punish corrupt politicians? Heterogeneous views about the importance of corruption can determine whether or not increased information enhances accountability. If partisan cleavages correlate with the importance voters place on corruption, then the consequences of information may vary by candidate, even when voters identify multiple candidates as corrupt. We provide evidence of this mechanism from a field experiment in a mayoral election in Brazil where a reputable interest group declared both candidates corrupt. We distributed fliers in the runoff mayoral election in São Paulo. Informing voters about the challenger's record reduced turnout by 1.9 percentage points and increased the opponent's vote by 2.6 percentage points. Informing voters about the incumbent's record had no effect on behavior. We attribute this divergent finding to differences in how each candidate's supporters view corruption. Using survey data and a survey experiment, we show that the challenger's supporters are more willing to punish their candidate for corruption, while the incumbent's supporters lack this inclination. |
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Informing voters about the challenger's record reduced turnout by 1.9 percentage points and increased the opponent's vote by 2.6 percentage points. Informing voters about the incumbent's record had no effect on behavior. We attribute this divergent finding to differences in how each candidate's supporters view corruption. 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subjects | Accountability Candidates Congressional investigations Corruption Corruption in government Democracy Election results Elections Experimental methods Experiments Incumbency Letter Local elections Mayors NGOs Nongovernmental organizations Partisanship Party identification Political parties Political science Politicians Polls & surveys Reputations Sexual orientation Supporters Voter behavior Voter turnout Voters |
title | When Do Voters Punish Corrupt Politicians? Experimental Evidence from a Field and Survey Experiment |
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