The Impact of Political Advertising in the 2001 U.K. General Election

David Sanders, P. Norris
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引用次数: 39

Abstract

This article explores the extent to which advocacy and attack Party Election Broadcasts (PEBs) affected voters’ party preferences during the British general election campaign of 2001. The analysis uses an experimental design that involved conducting “media exposure” tests on a representative sample of Greater London voters (N = 919) during the final weeks of the June 2001 election campaign. Respondents completed a pre-test questionnaire before being exposed to a variety of different media stimuli. Their political attitudes were then measured again in a post-test questionnaire. The empirical findings suggest that, in general, PEBs exerted little direct effect on voters’ images of the main political parties in 2001. However, there were a series of “partial” exposure effects confined to particular sub-groups of voters. For example, for non-partisan voters, “attack” advertising appears to have been less effective than “advocacy” advertising. Indeed, in the U.K. in 2001 there were contexts in which negative campaigning was explicitly counter-productive in the sense that it appears to have actively stimulated sympathy for the target of the attack rather than strengthened the relative position of the sponsor.
政治广告对2001年英国大选的影响
本文探讨了在2001年英国大选期间,宣传和攻击政党选举广播(PEBs)对选民政党偏好的影响程度。该分析采用了一种实验设计,即在2001年6月竞选活动的最后几周对大伦敦选民的代表性样本(N = 919)进行“媒体曝光”测试。被调查者在接触各种不同的媒体刺激之前完成了一份测试前问卷。然后在测试后的问卷中再次测量他们的政治态度。实证结果表明,总体而言,PEBs对2001年选民对主要政党的形象几乎没有直接影响。然而,有一系列的“部分”暴露效应局限于特定的选民子群体。例如,对于无党派选民来说,“攻击”广告似乎不如“倡导”广告有效。事实上,在2001年的英国,在某些情况下,负面的竞选活动显然是适得其反的,因为它似乎积极地激发了对攻击目标的同情,而不是加强了赞助商的相对地位。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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