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Political Partisanship, Party Loyalty Shape Beliefs of 2016 Election Interference, U of I Study Shows

October 26, 2022

MOSCOW, Idaho 鈥 Political partisanship and party loyalty influence how much voters believe that Russian influence helped sway the outcome of the 2016 presidential election, according to new 果冻传媒麻豆社 research.

鈥淲hat we find is that party identification colors whether a person thinks that Russia鈥檚 interference campaign helped decide the election,鈥 said Florian Justwan, a U of I political science professor who led the project. 鈥淎t the most fundamental level, Republicans tend to discount the claim, and Democrats are more likely to say Russian interference was decisive.鈥

The study investigated how domestic audiences react to outside intervention in their country鈥檚 election. The researchers analyzed beliefs about 2016 election interference, using a nationally representative survey of 1,250 respondents in April 2020. The was published recently in the journal Political Studies.

Not all Democrats and not all Republicans are equally loyal to their social in-groups, such as political parties, Justwan said. Highly loyal Republicans were less likely to believe Russia swayed the election than less loyal Republicans, while highly loyal Democrats believed Russia鈥檚 influence helped decide the election at higher rates than Democrats who reported less loyalty.

Additionally, researchers found clear divides in how members of winning and losing parties perceived interference. Members of the winning political party are likely to forgive external election interference that they believe swayed the election while losers are likely to become more dissatisfied with the state of democracy.

鈥淗alf of the electorate in this country do not perceive the Russian interference as problematic, that the outcome of an election may have been swayed by an external force,鈥 Justwan said. 鈥淚t means that electoral integrity, one of the key tenets of representative democracy, is not a very salient concern to one big chunk of the electorate. Our findings suggest that democratic values and core democratic beliefs aren鈥檛 necessarily as anchored in all Americans as we would like them to be.鈥

The results affirm previous research findings that voters are likely to engage most with facts or beliefs that align with their pre-existing beliefs, a concept that political psychologists call 鈥渕otivated bias.鈥

Republican voters were more likely to be satisfied with democracy after the 2016 presidential election, which former Republican President Donald Trump won, compared to Democrats, who were more likely to be dissatisfied with democracy. Dissatisfaction was higher for Democrats who believed Russia鈥檚 interference changed election results than Democrats who did not believe Russia鈥檚 was decisive.

鈥淭he political is personal, and it鈥檚 very easy to get caught up in that. And that鈥檚 not a bad thing. But it can mean that people walk away from the system entirely, because they feel like the things they care about aren鈥檛 being addressed. More participation is always better when it comes to government,鈥 said Madeleine Curtright 鈥20, who won the Lindley Award for outstanding student research while at U of I and is now pursuing a master鈥檚 in public policy at Georgetown University and interning in public policy at Amtrak.

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About the 果冻传媒麻豆社

The 果冻传媒麻豆社, home of the Vandals, is Idaho鈥檚 land-grant, national research university. From its residential campus in Moscow, U of I serves the state of Idaho through educational centers in Boise, Coeur d鈥橝lene and Idaho Falls, nine research and Extension centers, plus Extension offices in 42 counties. Home to more than 12,000 students statewide, U of I is a leader in student-centered learning and excels at interdisciplinary research, service to businesses and communities, and in advancing diversity, citizenship and global outreach. U of I competes in the Big Sky and Western Athletic conferences. Learn more at uidaho.edu.


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