Edmonton Journal

Campaigns likely have little influence on voters

Our politician­s need to drop the partisan bickering and tell constituen­ts the truth

- GRAHAM THOMSON gthomson@postmedia.com Twitter.com/graham_journal

“Campaigns matter.”

It is probably the shortest adage in politics. And one that everyone takes as gospel. Maybe we shouldn’t.

We think campaigns matter because political parties can win or lose based on what happens during the relatively short period of an election campaign.

Consequent­ly, we think politician­s are justified in pouring oodles of money and effort into winning over voters.

However, a new mega study by a couple of American political scientists is raising doubts about the wisdom of politician­s spending so much time and treasure trying to change the minds of voters, whether it be through TV advertisin­g, phone calls or good old door-to-door canvassing.

“Our best guess is that it persuades about one in 800 voters, substantiv­ely zero,” conclude the authors, Joshua Kalla at Berkeley and David Broockman at Stanford. “Our argument is not that campaigns do not influence general elections in any way, but that the direct persuasive effects of their voter contact and advertisin­g in general elections are essentiall­y zero.”

I raise this now because we’re in the middle of municipal election campaigns — and because we’re pretty much in the red zone for the next provincial election even though it won’t happen until the spring of 2019.

The authors of the academic paper looked at the results of 49 field experiment­s to gauge the persuasive effects of “campaign advertisin­g and outreach through the mail, phone calls, canvassing, TV, online ads, or literature drops on voters’ candidate choices.”

Voters are stubborn and not easily manipulate­d.

This probably sounds like heresy to all the political consultant­s and operatives who spend their lives looking at ways to influence voters during election campaigns.

Although the authors looked at American politics, not Canadian, you have to think their conclusion­s have implicatio­ns here.

If nothing else, maybe it will convince all those consultant­s to tone down the barrage of political ads that bombard us on TV and the blizzard of campaign literature that clogs our mailboxes.

Another interestin­g take-away is, generally, people change their opinion only if a politician they trust changes his or her opinion.

Politician­s, of course, rarely change their stance, especially during an election campaign.

They are more likely to go down with the ship than risk changing course. This helps feed hyperparti­san politics, where your side is always right and the other side is always wrong.

I raise this now because of the great controvers­y over TransCanad­a killing the proposed Energy East pipeline — the $15-billion project that would have pumped Alberta oil to New Brunswick to be shipped overseas.

The pipeline apparently died from a thousand cuts, including a depressed price for oil, changes to the federal review process, environmen­tal protests, a slowdown in oilsands growth and a drop in demand for pipelines.

Everybody, depending on their particular bias, points to their favourite culprit.

In its letter to the National Energy Board, TransCanad­a offers up a cast of villains including “the existing and likely future delays resulting from the regulatory process, the associated cost implicatio­ns and the increasing­ly challengin­g issues and obstacles.”

By mentioning the “regulatory process,” the company is providing

The direct persuasive effects of their voter contact and advertisin­g in general elections are essentiall­y zero.

ammunition for Conservati­ve politician­s to blame federal Liberals and provincial New Democrats for killing the project.

But by also blaming “increasing­ly challengin­g issues and obstacles,” the company is providing ammunition for Liberals and New Democrats to point to the depressed price of oil, something beyond their control.

If only politician­s would bury the partisan hatchet and accept the other side has a point.

Conservati­ves would admit the pipeline didn’t make economic sense in today’s depressed market, while Liberals would admit the new federal NEB process was the final straw for the TransCanad­a camel’s back.

Considerin­g how voters tend to change their opinion only when their favourite politician­s change theirs, maybe this would bring a little more civility and less bitterness to our political discourse.

And maybe next election all politician­s would need to spend less money on annoying attack ads and campaign literature. They don’t seem to work anyway.

 ?? GAVIN YOUNG/POSTMEDIA ?? UCP leadership candidate Jason Kenney and every other politician may be wasting their time trying to persuade voters — a new study suggests the vast majority already have their minds made up.
GAVIN YOUNG/POSTMEDIA UCP leadership candidate Jason Kenney and every other politician may be wasting their time trying to persuade voters — a new study suggests the vast majority already have their minds made up.
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