Leader over policy? The influence of political leaders on policy preferences
Metadatos:
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor/es:
Levy Yeyati, Eduardo
Moscovich, Lorena
Abuin, Constanza
Fecha:
2017-10Resumen
To extend the existing literature on political polarization beyond the traditional setup (an
ideologically well-defined two-party setup), we run survey experiments in the great
Buenos Aires area of Argentina to explore the role of leader and party endorsement in
shaping public opinion over policies, in a context of a weak and ideologically elusive party
system dominated by strong personalistic leaders. We find evidence of a significant (leader
as well as party) endorsement effect, regardless of the degree of ex ante polarization (so
that sponsorship may introduce polarization on ex ante unpolarized issues). In addition, we
document asymmetries relative to party and leader (some leaders have larger polarizing
effects than others; negative identification with a leader seems to prevail over positive
identification) and the ineffectiveness of co-sponsorship and “against-character”
endorsement to broaden policy support.