A Spiral of Cynicism for Some: The Contingent Effects of Campaign News Frames on Participation and Confidence in Government |
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Authors: | Nicholas A. Valentino Matthew N. Beckmann Thomas A. Buhr |
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Affiliation: | Department of Communications , Stanford University , Stanford, CA |
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Abstract: | This article explores the impact of strategy-based campaign coverage on turnout and confidence in government. Recent theoretical advances suggest that variables such as sophistication and involvement frequently moderate media exposure effects. We hypothesize that the impact of strategy frames will be moderated by political involvement and sophistication. In an experiment, we precisely isolate and manipulate particular story elements that have been said to foster public cynicism: the strategic interpretation of candidate motives, the presence of polling results, and the use of war or game metaphors to describe the campaign. Relative to the issue-oriented coverage, strategy frames boost the number of strategy-based comments people offer when describing the campaign and depress issue-based commentary. As expected, framing effects on turnout, trust in government, civic duty, and the perceived meaningfulness of elections are moderated by involvement and sophistication. Nonpartisans and those with less than a college degree are significantly demobilized and alienated by strategy-based coverage, while partisans and the highly educated are mostly unaffected. |
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Keywords: | Campaign News Effects Of Political News News Frames Political Cynicism Strategy-BASED Political News |
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