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Inaccurate politicians: Elected Representatives’ Estimations of Public Opinion in Four Countries

Authors :
Stefaan Walgrave
Arno Jansen
Julie Sevenans
Karolin Soontjens
Jean-Benoit Pilet
Nathalie Brack
Frédéric Varone
Luzia Helfer
Rens Vliegenthart
Toni van der Meer
Christian Breunig
Stefanie Bailer
Lior Sheffer
Peter John Loewen
Corporate Communication (ASCoR, FMG)
Source :
Journal of politics, The Journal of Politics, 85(1), 209-222. Cambridge University Press
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Cambridge University Press, 2023.

Abstract

Knowledge of what voters prefer is central to several theories of democratic representation and accountability. Despite this, we know little in a comparative sense of how well politicians know citizens’ policy preferences. We present results from a study of 866 politicians in four countries. Politicians were asked to estimate the percentage of public support for various policy proposals. Comparing more than 10,000 estimations with actual levels of public support, we conclude that politicians are quite inaccurate estimators of people’s preferences. They make large errors and even regularly misperceive what a majority of the voters wants. Politicians are hardly better at estimating public preferences than ordinary citizens. They misperceive not only the preferences of the general public but also the preferences of their own partisan electorate. Politicians are not the experts of public opinion we expect them to be. published

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14682508 and 00223816
Volume :
85
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Politics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f02b4c29651dbe02bd2d8f3437815f40