Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1052047 Electoral Studies 2011 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

Most survey-based research on campaign effects in British elections has focussed on exposure to the campaign. Far less attention has been given to how the campaign is perceived, although American research on the effects of negative campaigning suggests that this is a potentially important area. The article investigates the extent to which vote choices in the 2007 Scottish Parliament election were affected by perceptions of the parties’ campaigns as ‘positive’ or ‘negative’. Partisanship and increased exposure to a party’s campaign increased individuals’ chances of rating a campaign positively. Other things being equal, however, campaigns which come to be seen in a negative light backfire on the party responsible, reducing the propensity of people to vote for it.

► We study the impact of negative campaigning in the UK. ► Partisanship influences perceptions of campaign negativity. ► Voters are less likely to support parties perceived as campaigning negatively.

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