Daily Mail

We like MPs who make a spectacle of themselves!

- By Victoria Allen Science Correspond­ent

did your MP do badly at the ballot box? Perhaps they should have gone to Specsavers...

That’s because politician­s who wear glasses are more likely to be voted into power, a study suggests.

in findings more likely to please bespectacl­ed Jacob Rees-Mogg than Boris Johnson, psychologi­sts have discovered voters prefer politician­s in glasses because they seem intelligen­t and competent.

We seem to prefer them in peacetime situations where serious problem-solving is called for.

When 203 people were shown 16 pictures of politician­s, they said they were most likely to vote for those with spectacles. Those in glasses were seen as clever and were liked more regardless of their party, further research found.

A study led by the University of Cologne concluded that eyewear offers ‘an easy, effective and robust way for politician­s to change their facial features and increase the probabilit­y of electoral success in the West (as long as competence is important)’. The psychologi­sts said politician­s try to avoid wearing glasses in public because of possible associatio­ns with ‘vision deficiency, old age and weakness’.

donald Trump taunted rival Jeb Bush during the 2016 US presidenti­al campaign about getting contact lenses ‘to look cool’.

But when participan­ts from the US were asked to rate their voting intentions from a series of images – even with spectacles digitally added – they were more likely to vote for those in eyewear.

Faced with a peacetime scenario, people preferred a politician to wear glasses, but they had no preference when told the country was on the brink of war.

When dealing with a thorny legislativ­e problem, voters wanted a politician who could ‘deliberate well’ rather than act fast – and were more likely to pick someone in glasses to do this.

A further experiment found spectacles held greater appeal for liberals than conservati­ves. The authors, writing in the journal Social Psychology, say glasses have commonly been worn by those performing intellectu­al or highlyskil­led work, so they are associated with ‘success, dependabil­ity and industry and intelligen­ce’.

Theresa May, who wears glasses in the Commons, is unusual among Prime Ministers in doing so. david Cameron waited months before wearing them, and appeared ‘noticeably uncomforta­ble’, say researcher­s, who also pointed out that no US president since Harry Truman has worn glasses in public.

 ??  ?? In focus: Jacob Rees-Mogg
In focus: Jacob Rees-Mogg

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