Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
955915 Social Science Research 2014 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

•This research examines the influence of Hurricane Sandy on the presidential election.•A mixed correlational and experimental design generated converging results.•Results across methods suggest the hurricane helped President Obama initially.•Results also suggest the hurricane’s salience among voters hurt Obama by election day.

Despite drawing on a common pool of data, observers of the 2012 presidential campaign came to different conclusions about whether, how, and to what extent “October surprise” Hurricane Sandy influenced the election. The present study used a mixed correlational and experimental design to assess the relation between, and effect of, the salience of Hurricane Sandy on attitudes and voting intentions regarding President Barack Obama and Mitt Romney in a large sample of voting-aged adults. Results suggest that immediately following positive news coverage of Obama’s handling of the storm’s aftermath, Sandy’s salience positively influenced attitudes toward Obama, but that by election day, reminders of the hurricane became a drag instead of a boon for the President. In addition to theoretical implications, this study provides an example of how to combine methodological approaches to help answer questions about the impact of unpredictable, large-scale events as they unfold.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Psychology Social Psychology
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