Previous research has shown that populism is associated with increased negativity and reliance on simplistic heuristic criteria in evaluating political information. such as gender stereotypes,. In a simulated scenario, we presented participants with a description of a fictional male (versus female) candidate and later exposed them to a political attack against the candidate. We then examined whether the effect of the attack varied depending on participants’ populism, the gender of the candidate attacked, and the attack’s focus on morality or competence, controlling for participants’ sexism and political orientation. The results showed that participants with high (versus low) levels of populism rated gave, in general, more negative evaluations of the candidate after the attack. Furthermore, participants with high levels of populism rated the female candidate lower after an attack on morality than after an attack on competence, while the opposite was true for the male candidate. The discussion focuses on how populists refer to the violation of stereotypical norms when evaluating negative information about political candidates.
Bertolotti, M. M., Picciafoco, L., Catellani, P., Populism and the Effects of Political Attacks on Male and Female Candidates, <<COMUNICAZIONE POLITICA>>, 2024; 2024 (2): 195-218. [doi:10.3270/114098] [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/299276]
Populism and the Effects of Political Attacks on Male and Female Candidates
Bertolotti, Mauro Maria
Primo
;Picciafoco, Laura;Catellani, Patrizia
2024
Abstract
Previous research has shown that populism is associated with increased negativity and reliance on simplistic heuristic criteria in evaluating political information. such as gender stereotypes,. In a simulated scenario, we presented participants with a description of a fictional male (versus female) candidate and later exposed them to a political attack against the candidate. We then examined whether the effect of the attack varied depending on participants’ populism, the gender of the candidate attacked, and the attack’s focus on morality or competence, controlling for participants’ sexism and political orientation. The results showed that participants with high (versus low) levels of populism rated gave, in general, more negative evaluations of the candidate after the attack. Furthermore, participants with high levels of populism rated the female candidate lower after an attack on morality than after an attack on competence, while the opposite was true for the male candidate. The discussion focuses on how populists refer to the violation of stereotypical norms when evaluating negative information about political candidates.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.