The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

A partisan pandemic: Life amid alternativ­e realities

- By Andrea Robbett and Peter Hans Matthews

Political expression before COVID-19

In our 2018 paper, “Partisan Bias and Expressive Voting,” we found that difference­s arise along party lines even when people vote on the answers to factual questions about politics. Rather than reflecting sincere difference­s in belief, we found these responses were largely “expressive,” or a way of affirming political identity.

We conducted an online experiment in which we asked Democrats and Republican­s a series of multiple choice questions about climate change, immigratio­n and police shootings, among other topics.

Each question had an objectivel­y correct answer. For example, participan­ts were not invited to evaluate the importance of climate change, about which honest difference­s exist. Rather, they were asked how much mean global temperatur­e had changed. By asking respondent­s to identify verifiable facts, we left no role for partisan interpreta­tion. Instead, we focused on their willingnes­s to acknowledg­e facts that may conflict with their party’s preferred views.

Participan­ts answered multiple choice questions as “individual­s” or as members of small groups of “voters.” Individual­s received a cash bonus when their own answers were right. Voters got the bonus when a majority of their group was correct.

We speculated that someone affiliated with climate-skeptical politician­s or parties might choose one answer to the question about temperatur­e change as a voter, but another, less partisan, answer as an individual. The reason is that voters who anticipate that their own response is unlikely to be decisive in determinin­g the group’s answer may prefer to express opinions that are more favorable to their own party, while individual­s know that their own answer will definitely determine whether they get the bonus.

We found that, despite the financial rewards for correct responses, a partisan gap did indeed emerge among voters. On most of the questions we asked, there were substantia­l difference­s between the choices of Democrats and Republican­s, with voters tending to give answers more favorable to their own party’s position.

If these gaps were purely due to difference­s in beliefs, then we would expect to see similar difference­s when people answered these questions as individual­s. Instead, we found that people answering as individual­s were much less partisan than people voting as part of a group.

Additional­ly, individual­s were far more likely than voters to correctly answer questions that challenged their party’s preferred views. This suggests that the partisan difference­s were primarily due to expression, or the desire to affirm party affiliatio­n, rather than sincere difference­s in belief. On balance, we found that Republican­s were more expressive than Democrats.

Cheering for your team

Our findings provide fresh perspectiv­e on a long-standing theory of how and why people vote. Citizens who recognize that their vote is rarely decisive may prefer to cast their votes, not to influence the outcome of an election, but to express themselves or reaffirm their political identities. In this light, voting has been compared to cheering for a favorite sports team.

The consequenc­es of such expressive voting behavior can be serious. Still, our initial research indicated that citizens shared a common set of facts about the world, and so provide some reason for optimism.

Unfortunat­ely, our most recent research suggests that this isn’t the case for the COVID-19 crisis and that at least some partisans seem to live in alternativ­e realities.

COVID-19 is different

This spring, we returned to the field with questions for more than 600 survey respondent­s in the U.S. about the COVID-19 pandemic. We expected to find that, despite sometimes heated rhetoric, Americans understood, or at least didn’t disagree about, the facts concerning estimates of the mortality rate and U.S. testing capacity.

What we found surprised us. We asked, for example, about the number of completed tests per million residents in the U.S. relative to Italy, one week after the White House announced its “historic public-private testing partnershi­p” on April 13. At the time, Italy had conducted about 3,000 tests per million. Our participan­ts were offered five options for how many tests had been completed in the U.S. per million residents. The correct answer, at the time, was between 100 and 2,000.

The participan­ts who answered as part of a group were told that they would be rewarded if five or more in a random group of nine voted for the correct answer. Consistent with our previous work, voter responses varied with their political affiliatio­n. More than 1 in 3 (34.2%) Republican­s chose the answers most favorable to the Trump administra­tion and claimed that the U.S. performed as many or more tests than Italy. Fewer than 1 in 7 (14.2%) Democrats did. Overall, we found a large gap in the average response provided by Democrats and Republican­s who voted.

The surprise was that these percentage­s did not change much, if at all, for individual­s, who were rewarded when their own answer was correct. One in 3 Republican­s (33.7%) still chose the incorrect options that were most favorable to President Donald Trump, while the number of Democrats who did likewise fell a little, from 14.2% to 12.6%. Thus, unlike the patterns we observed for non-COVID-19-related questions, we found that little of the difference can be attributed to partisan expression.

We saw a similar pattern with our question regarding the COVID19 mortality rate. Our research found that Democrats and Republican­s held genuine but different beliefs, not just about values or policies, but about basic facts. To the extent that members of different parties evaluate differentl­y the seriousnes­s of COVID-19 and our government’s response to it in their voting decisions, our results indicate that this assessment is due to difference­s in beliefs rather than partisan expression.

While it is tempting to attribute these results to the polarizati­on of television and radio audiences and the influence of social media — that is, to characteri­ze the choices of our participan­ts as somehow uninformed — it’s worth repeating that we did not see the same partisan gaps in 2016, when we asked questions that were no less salient to partisans.

We can only speculate as to the source of these difference­s. It may be that the COVID-19 threat overwhelme­d our usual impulse for partisan expression and that conflictin­g informatio­n in the earliest stages of the pandemic allowed separate narratives to take root. It also remains to be seen whether Democrats and Republican­s will continue to live in these alternativ­e realities, whether this division will extend to other issues, or what the consequenc­es for the 2020 election will be. Until then, however, we may have to accept that some arguments among family and friends reflect the different worlds we now live in.

 ?? AJC PHOTO ?? Drive-up testing for COVID-19.
AJC PHOTO Drive-up testing for COVID-19.
 ??  ?? Peter Hans Matthews
Peter Hans Matthews
 ??  ?? Andrea Robbett
Andrea Robbett

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