Modern language, whatever else it is and however misused, is
at least fertile, especially over the past few decades. We all come across numerous
modern expressions which fit the linguistic purpose for which they evolved.
One which fits rather well in my view is the mainly US term low information voter or LIV. There is nothing technical
about the term – we probably all know what it means without being told and
without having to look it up on Wikipedia.
From wikipedia
Low information
voters, also known as LIVs or misinformation voters, are people who may vote,
but who are generally poorly informed about politics. The phrase is mainly used
in the United States, and has become popular since the mid-nineties.
Surely UK politics suffers acutely from the problem
this term so neatly encapsulates? Whether the problem is suffered equally by left
and right I don’t know.
American pollster and
political scientist Samuel Popkin coined the term "low-information"
in 1991 when he used the phrase "low-information signaling" in his
book The Reasoning Voter: Communication and Persuasion in Presidential
Campaigns. Low-information signaling referred to cues or heuristics used by
voters, in lieu of substantial information, to determine who to vote for.
Examples include voters liking Bill Clinton for eating at McDonald's, and
perceiving John Kerry as elitist for saying wind-surfing was his favorite
sport.
Over in the US, Professor
Jacobson thinks the LIV problem is much more a problem for the political right
than the political left.
I previously wrote about
how BuzzFeed Politics has combined “the culture” and savvy crafting into a highly
effective tool for undermining Republicans with subtle and not-so-subtle mockery. “Look at the goofy cat, look at the goofy celeb,
look at the goofy Republican” is more dangerous to us than a 5000-word article in
The New York Times Sunday Magazine.
Back to Wikipedia, there are plenty of examples of what
political parties are up against. It’s nothing we don’t know, but is worth
raising because it’s an intractable issue.
A 1992 study found
that in the absence of other information, voters used candidates' physical
attractiveness to draw inferences about their personal qualities and political
ideology.
A study performed
using logistic regression analysis on data from the 1986 through 1994 American
National Election Studies found that low-information voters tend to assume
female and black candidates are more liberal than male and white candidates of
the same party.
A 2003 study that
analyzed precinct-level data from city council elections held in Peoria,
Illinois between 1983 and 1999 found that the placement of candidates' names on
the ballot was a point of influence for low-information voters.
An analysis concerned
with the "puzzling finding" that incumbent legislators in mature
democracies charged with corruption are not commonly punished in elections
found that less-informed voters were significantly more likely to vote for
incumbents accused of corruption than were their better-informed counterparts,
presumably because they did not know about the allegations.
The LIV problem is not a problem for mainstream politics, in
the sense that they probably don’t care if voters are informed
or not. They just want influence - by pulling whatever levers there are.
UK politics is corrupt, but whose responsibility is that? Is
it the corrupt political classes or the low information voters or both?
5 comments:
Good post!
There's something deeply depressing about the whole business; it's been around a long time, but we are surely entering a new era, with a population accustomed - and encouraged - to apply the most subjective and superficial criteria when 'voting' on a regular basis for TV talent acts or reality show contestants.
TBH I reckon the LIV has the right approach - do you like the look of them. Surely very very few people read a manifesto or research the political party - and little good would it do them anyway! There being no Advertising Standards Agency for political propadanda the poor voter has little or nothing to go on. Like going to a supermarket where none of the lables is reliable.
I rather think Prof Jacobson would do well to test people's perceptions 'does this person look like a crook?'. Some politicos do look like crooks - but still survive, therein lies an interesting study.
Mac - thanks. All this will be common knowledge in political circles and they have no intention of raising the bar.
Roger - I think one of the problems is not paying attention to what they do and don't do, what succeeds and what doesn't and whose fault it is.
There are lots of trails to follow but too many don't bother.
AKH, I trust you will not mind if I do that which I have done previously and link to you without having first asked your permission..... :)
Damn good post - hence the wish to link!
Witterings - no problem - there's no need to ask really!
Post a Comment