Abstract
The last quarter of a century has brought a stream of research that shows that voters’ choices at the polls are strongly influenced by their emotions. The evidence, however, is almost exclusively based on data concerning candidate-centered elections, in particular those for the American presidency. This paper examines the role of emotions in party-centered politics. It utilises data from the Dutch Parliamentary Election Study 2006, which asked voters to rate their feelings of enthusiasm, anxiety (worry), irritation, and pride for three major political parties. These measures help explain party evaluations, even if social identity, ideology, and policy preferences are taken into account. In line with the theory of affective intelligence, voters whose primary emotional response was one of anxiety showed stronger effects of cognitive factors, in particular perceived ideological agreement. Contrary to expectations, negative feelings as indicated by low evaluation scores were not so much the result of irritation or worry, but of the absence of enthusiasm. This suggests that feeling thermometer scales are not bipolar measures of positive and negative affect, but unipolar measures of positive affect.
Original language | English |
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Number of pages | 34 |
Publication status | Published - 6 Sept 2007 |
Event | 4th ECPR General Conference 2007 - University of Pisa, Pisa, Italy Duration: 6 Sept 2007 → 8 Sept 2007 Conference number: 4 |
Conference
Conference | 4th ECPR General Conference 2007 |
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Country/Territory | Italy |
City | Pisa |
Period | 6/09/07 → 8/09/07 |