POLITICS

Voters' Verdicts: How Crises Shape Election Outcomes

GLOBALFri Jan 24 2025
When a big crisis like COVID-19 hits, it's fascinating to see how voters judge their governments. Classical ideas of responsibility get complicated because crises affect many areas and people can compare different performances. We ran an experiment across 16 countries with over 22, 000 people, asking them to make re-election decisions based on 178, 184 randomly assigned government profiles. Turns out, how well governments handled health and economic issues during the pandemic really mattered to voters. Using advanced techniques, we found that these performance signals had pretty consistent effects across different countries. In another look at the data, we discovered that people's voting intentions were linked to how they thought their government did in handling the pandemic, both in health and economic terms. This shows that how governments perform during crises really impacts how voters feel about them.

questions

    How do subjective evaluations of government performance influence voter decisions compared to objective data?
    If elections were held on a reality TV show, how would viewers vote based on the government's pandemic handling?
    How does the design of the conjoint experiment ensure that the results are representative of real-world political decisions?

actions