Let's Find Common Ground - What Americans Want from Politicians— And What They're Not Getting: Sean Westwood
Episode Date: January 18, 2024American politics are often dominated by the loudest voices on the left and right. In this episode, we learn the crucial difference between what Americans get from their elected representatives and ...what they really want to hear. Professor Sean Westwood of Dartmouth College is our guest. As Director of The Polarization Research Lab, he studies American political behavior and public opinion, examining how partisanship and information from political elites affect the behavior of citizens. "There is an absolute need for common ground," Sean Westwood tells us. The research shows that most Democrats and Republicans "know very little about the other side and have significant misperceptions." We learn why elites, including political leaders and celebrities, have a powerful impact on public behavior. "When we humanize the opposition and bring politicians together and demonstrate how they can have civil disagreement, you set norms that the public will follow," he says.
Transcript
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What do Americans want from their politicians and aren't getting?
That's what this podcast is all about.
Our politics are often dominated by the loudest voices on the left and right.
The elected officials who make the most negative or outrageous claims about the other side
get the most coverage.
In the next 30 minutes, we hear about why political leaders and celebrities
have a powerful
impact on public behavior and why most Americans have misconceptions about the other side.
If you are to rebuild,
respect in politics, it has to start at the top.
This is Let's Find Common Ground. I'm Ashley Melntite. And I'm Richard Davies. Our guest is Professor Sean Westwood of Dartmouth College. As director
of the Poeurization Research Lab, he studies American political behavior and public opinion.
Sean looks at how partisanship and information from political elites affect the behavior of our citizens.
He has a lot of data to back up what he's saying, Richard, you kick things off.
First question. The 2024 presidential campaign is likely to be highly negative, both the messaging from the candidates and the
media coverage as well, is this what the public wants?
The public do not respond to negativity.
There's an impression among candidates, there's an impression among those who work for candidates
that if you go negative, you'll hurt the other side, you'll persuade the other side's
voters to stay home, you'll persuade the other side. You'll persuade the other side's voters to stay home.
You'll persuade the other side's voters to perhaps even switch to support in your candidate.
But the data just really don't bear that out.
To a certain extent, it's the case that negativity is a common play, but a very ineffective play.
So what a vote is want instead? The public want their representatives
to provide positive and informative messages
throughout the campaign.
And they want to be able to use the information
that they gain from a positive campaign messages
to determine who they're going to vote for.
And just relying on negativity, money's the ground.
It prevents undecided voters from getting the information they need in order to make an informed choice.
One of the most striking findings from your research is that negative political advertising
does not work.
So then what should politicians do instead to persuade voters to support them?
Because the vast majority do these negative ads.
Not only do negative ads not work, but ads in general tend not to work.
And that's largely because of the lack of content within them.
So in 30 seconds, it's very hard to provide a nuanced, detailed policy platform.
It's very challenging to describe your position on any given
issue, let alone the entire range of issues that a voter is going to consider when making
her choice for president. So what is effective is not necessarily advertising. It's face-to-face
contact. It's getting out the vote. It's engaging with the voters in an attempt to get them to shock the polls.
So these kinds of easy moments of contact that we have at the television ad, that's just
not the most effective way to reach voters or to persuade voters to actually go over
the polls and vote.
That finding might surprise many political professionals and it certainly goes up against the campaign budgets of
decades of
political campaigns. So what do you know from your research that political professionals don't?
Well, so there are really two things the first first of which is an unfortunate fact of the consultant model, but they get compensation
from AdVice.
So part of the compensation that they get from working with the candidate is by taking
a cut of the overall AdVice.
So there's an incentive for them to spend money on advertisements. The second thing is that there's a fear of not doing what is expected. So if you're a candidate and
you run campaign ads, you're going to look like a regular candidate. If you're a candidate and
you don't run campaign ads, suddenly the news outlets will start asking questions. I think we saw
this quite clearly in 2016, when Donald Trump was not spending much on advertising,
the media reported constantly on Donald Trump
is not spending on advertising.
Can he win the election?
Donald Trump doesn't have a traditional media profile.
Can he win the election?
And in 2016, he shocked the political world
and he did win the election.
What did your research say about how Americans view
election candidates and campaigns?
Americans are generally very disappointed in elections.
They're disappointed in presidential candidates
and they're disappointed with Congress.
At the same time, they report that they want to see policy.
They want to see compromise.
They want to see meaningful action coming from our elected officials.
We don't need to exist in a world where we're focused on conflict over policy.
We don't need to live in a world where campaigns are focused not necessarily so much on what
a candidate might do for the country, but what they might prevent the other side from doing to the country.
So it's important for us to understand that Americans want their politicians to do work.
They want Americans, they want politicians to deliver goods and services and policy to
constituents. And when they see candidates and when they see elected officials not doing that,
it makes them less trustworthy of the system and makes them less supportive of the system
and it makes them less positive towards not only the candidates or the elected officials
who are running for office, but also to the entire
federal electoral system.
Doesn't make them less likely to vote?
Doesn't make them most likely to vote, yeah.
We did a recent episode with Governor Spencer Cox of Utah and he is the chair of the National Governors Association and came up with this
initiative called Disagree Better. Part of it is modeling good behavior by politicians
both red and blue, appearing together at public events, even making political ads together.
Is that kind of stuff effective? Does that work?
So I think we need to recognize that politicians set the norms of the game.
So if you see elected officials engaged in conflict, if you see elected officials fighting with one another,
that tells you that that's how politics is done.
If you see elected officials engaged in the kind of
respectful debate that Governor Cox is so intent on rebuilding a country, that sends a message
to voters that that's what politics should look like. So if you want to change how politics is
conducted in this country, if you want to change the nature of political conflict. I think one of the most powerful things you can do is demonstrate that politicians don't necessarily
need to fight with one another. And politicians can have very different policy positions.
Politicians can have very different views on the way in which America should move forward,
but still respect, why not? So it's not so much that this is going to motivate individuals to vote or we'll vote for
one of the candidates who's appearing in these kinds of messages over the other,
but it's about resetting the norms that politics is subject to.
Well, I was just going to say, we know this, if you know your research shows that
we, the people don't respond positively to all this negativity, then why people still doing it?
Is it just because it's the way they've been doing things for however long?
It's the way things have been done. You want your side to win and you want the other side to lose. We've lost the nuance between
wanting your side to win and the other side to lose and viewing your side as always superior
and the other side is always inferior. We see so many examples of overtly bad behavior by politicians,
especially, you know, cable news and social media. Donald
Trump is, of course, famous for his name calling fairly recently. He sort of compared the,
you know, I think he called the radical left to vermin, and that's just one example. But
did this type of thing have an impact on voters? So it does.
The voters respond to the norms
they're set by elites.
If you are an American and you see
your politicians are now calling the opposing side
vermin or inhuman or anti-American or unpatriotic,
that's telling you that you should follow suit.
If you want to rebuild respect in politics,
it has to start at the top.
And the kind of rhetoric that we now
see coming from elected officials about the other side
are not only bad because we don't want
to see our elected officials saying those kinds of things.
But it's bad in that it's telling
voters that this is how they should be the other side.
This is how they should talk about the other side.
How desperate is the crisis currently facing the American political system?
There are a lot of scholars who think that we're on the verge of the Civil War.
Objectively, the data don't support that.
So the data show that we hate the other side,
but we're not willing to violate democratic norms.
We're not willing to support political violence.
So even the most extreme Americans,
those who are most inflamed in their views of the other side,
do not support the end of the American experiment. They do not support
armed insurrection, they do not support the kinds of things that would be necessary to
stabilize democracy in this country. So certainly we should be concerned about negativity.
Certainly we should be concerned about the fact that politicians and everyday Americans are denigrating other sides so openly and so
frequently, but that doesn't mean that we should feel the
end of democracy in our past.
We are at a point where things could get worse, but
there's not today at a point where we cannot save ourselves or rebuild our country.
A few months ago, you appeared at an event organized by the National Governors Association to discuss their campaign called Disagree Better.
And that's aimed at fostering open debate and healthy conflict when governors and other political leaders step up
and encourage civility in this way,
can it make a difference?
To come, I think that what we need to recognize
is there's a distinction between attacking the other side
and attacking the policy positions of the other side.
One is helpful and one is destructive. And I think this initiative isn't about making
debate disappear. It's not about making the members of both parties agree on policy.
It's about making the members of both parties who are rational discussion about policy. So if you want to challenge a policy, do so on its merits.
And just setting that norm of respectful and reasonable disagreement can have substantial
effects on the citizenry, right?
If you show them how debate can happen, if you show them how civil disagreement can occur,
you're prompting them to follow up in your footsteps.
You've said that people tend to model their own behavior on how the people they respect
behave, and so far we've been talking about politics, but does this also extend to the broader culture?
I think that's something that's lost, I think, and in a lot of the discussions that we have
about the power of political elites or elected officials, we are very well aware of the power
that celebrities have over culture, the power that they have over what is acceptable and what is not acceptable within society.
It's certainly the case that we know that young women and young men develop their worldview
from what they see online, from what they see on see, from what they see in the movie theater.
It's the same logic that underpins the connection between elect officials and citizens on politics.
So if you see LeBron James acting as a good citizen, if you see LeBron James being a strong male figure,
that's going to cue that kind of positive behavior to those who are following LeBron James being a strong male figure, that's going to cue that kind of positive
behavior to those who are following LeBron James.
If you're an elected official who's engaged in civility, if you're an elected official
who's prior kind, it's in policy over conflict, that's going to filter down to those who pay
attention to what you say.
It's certainly the case that elites
or celebrities drive behavior.
And we've disconnected the notion,
disconnected the linkage between elected officials
and the citizenry, in a way that's kind of allowed
elected officials to kind of go crazy
and allowed the citizenry to follow suit.
We're telling citizens that to be a good Democrat is to hate the Republicans,
to be a good Republican is to hate Democrats.
Sean Westwood of the Polarization Research Lab at Dartmouth.
This is Let's Find Common Ground. I'm Richard.
And I'm Richard. And I'm Ashley. At the beginning of our last episode, we mentioned that common ground committee co-founder
Bruce Bond died just before the start of the new year.
Bruce's passion for finding common ground and pushing back against rigid divides is at the heart of everything we do.
And we want to share with you a couple of his thoughts about our common ground scorecard.
First of all, what is it? Here's Bruce talking about the scorecard in a podcast last spring. card is a tool that we created for voters that allows the voter to see to what degree a candidate
is likely to work across the aisle to make progress as opposed to hold the ideological line.
It's a score of 0 to 100. It scores all senators, all representatives and the House of Representatives
and governors and also president. And the ideas before you go and vote,
you wanna check what the common ground score is
for the candidate that you're interested in.
By the way, it's not just the incumbents,
but the challengers as well.
And so you have a sense of the degree
to which someone is going to be bipartisan in the work
that they do if
they are elected.
Bruce Bond on Artek, the podcast he recorded last year with Eric Olson, co-founder of Common
Ground Committee.
Both of them met with members of Congress on Capitol Hill.
Bruce shared a story of what happened during one meeting.
We're visiting with a Congresswoman who is a high-score in the common ground score card.
And her staff let us know as we were sitting down that she had a meeting with Secretary
Blinken, Secretary of State, immediately following.
And we had like, I forget, 20 minutes is the most we were going to be able to do.
While 30 minutes into the conversation, her staff is like pulling on her to get the heck
out, to go meet with the secretary.
She was so engaged in the conversation because we were talking about how we could make progress
and the dynamic of bipartisanship growing within Congress.
She was so wrapped up in the conversation that she didn't want to leave.
And...
The ground was just too compelling.
It was too compelling.
Exactly.
What?
Our co-founder Bruce Bond speaking last year.
Find out more about the scorecard at commongroundscorkard.org.
It'll be a useful tool for voters throughout this year.
Learn how your elected politicians and challenges are rated on how much or how little they work to find common ground.
Now more from our interview with Sean Westwood.
Sean, how did you get interested in this topic? How do you come to be so involved with this whole world of polarization and difference
and people's behavior?
So I think what's most interesting here is that politics has grown to the point where we
no longer limit our political biases to things that are directly related to politics.
So if you dislike the other side, that's going to translate into the kinds of
people that you're willing to spend time with, the kinds of people that you would
like to work with, the kinds of people that you would like your children to
marry. So I was really concerned about how politics has spread into the
eight political world and had wondered how serious that problem is and then
secondly is that something that's happening on both sides of the aisle and
that's what really got me into looking at partisan animosity. It's not just
that it's having destructive effects in the political realm. It's not just that it's having destructive effects
in the political realm.
It's that it's having destructive effects in the social realm.
I really wanted to understand why that is happening.
What sort of destructive effects?
So if you were climb to a job and you list experience
with one of the two political parties. If your employer is at the other political party, they're less likely to call you back for
an interview.
If you apply for a scholarship and you list of verbally political activities on your resume,
you're less likely to get that scholarship. If you
list your political affiliations on a dating profile, you're less likely to
receive matches. So it's dividing the workplace, it's dividing the social
spaces where we would look for a life partner, it's dividing how we build our friend
networks online, it's divided how we see ourselves
in our community.
It's the case that partisanship is ever present
in people's minds today in a way that it wasn't
a very some past.
Partisanship is ever present, but are people actually
more interested in politics?
So that's an important distinction.
Americans today don't know very much about politics.
Most Americans cannot describe the policies that are being debated in Congress.
But it turns out that doesn't really matter for animosity. Animosity isn't so much about policy disagreement,
it isn't so much about principal divisions
between the party, it's much more tribal.
We're in a world where partisanship and partisan animosity
don't necessarily require that an individual
know much about politics.
It could just simply be, I'm in this group
and I don't like the other group as a consequence.
And how does that compare to times past?
I mean, like, I don't know, the 60s or 70s,
well, we better informed then
and perhaps less partisan as well?
We were certainly not, but I'm informed then.
It is, unfortunately, the case that political knowledge is something that has always been
relatively low in this country.
But what has changed is the extent to which Americans view the opposing party as bad or
un-American.
So in the 1960s and the 70s, things were a lot better in terms of how we view the
other side. And since the 80s, we've been on this downward path to present where the majority of
Americans don't have a positive view of the other side and a substantial portion have no positive
feelings whatsoever towards the other side.
What's changed is that today we have permanent campaigns with a presidency.
In the past, when you would get your news, it would come from MULTIR Prankhite,
it would come from ABC, your CBS, or NBC, and you would get a more holistic view of the world.
Today, people can partitions that they're conservative, they watch Fox News,
if they're liberal, they watch Fox News, if they're liberal,
they watch MSNBC. In the past, it was very difficult to avoid politics and news. In a world
where there were five channels on TV at 11 o'clock at night, you were watching the news, or you weren't
watching TV. Today, people could just tune out and watch the Kardashians or sports or Netflix or
whatever they want. People can really build their own echo chambers,
and when they do stick their head out,
they're watching politicians constantly fighting
from the presidency, constantly disparaging
of their side on cable news, constantly engaging
in the kind of communication that just wasn't possible
in the pre-internet, in the pre-twitter,
in the pre-social media error, in the pre-twitter, in the pre-social media error.
You mentioned social media has technology,
has social media given us all a megaphone
to shout from the rooftops, even when we don't have
a thought on our heads, or we haven't seriously
considered anything, but we just want to vent.
It certainly has.
It's certainly done that for the average American, but more importantly, it's done it for elected
officials.
So, if you were a member of Congress from a district that was relatively unimportant nationally,
your constituents are going to hear your daily thoughts, right?
You make it coverage in your local newspaper, If you do something that's incredibly important,
you make a national coverage.
Today, that same number of Congress
can say whatever they want on Twitter and reach an audience.
If it becomes viral, they might reach a large subset
of the American population.
And if it's particularly negative,
and if it's particularly attention-grabbing,
it might reach the national news.
So in the past, you would get news coverage because of accomplishment or because of something that
you had done for your constituents. Today, there's this short circuit where if you say something
that's particularly aggressive and particularly negative, that in and of itself can become news.
that in itself can become news. And speaking of what Americans think of each other
and the influence of the news and social media on all of us,
do the red and blue tribes actually
know what the other side thinks or are some of their perceptions off.
The sad truth is that Americans know very little about the other side and have significant misperceptions. So we don't know who's in the opposing party, we can't accurately describe
the composition of the opposing party. We think that they're much more evil,
or the faradis when it comes to challenging democracy.
And we also think that they're much, much more likely
to support political violence than they actually are.
I know that the divide is the most striking.
So the truth is, about 2% of the American public
would sanction a politically motivated murder.
But if you look at perceptions of the other side,
it could be 10 or 20 times larger than reality.
Most political discussions assume
that were either members of the red tribe or the blue tribe,
but very large numbers of voters identify as independent.
What about them?
The truth is that if we look at independence, most
behave like partisans. So if you are to follow up in a survey and ask, so you said
that you don't affiliate with the Democratic or the Republican party, are you
closer to one party than the other? Most will say, well, I'm actually closer to the Democratic party,
or I'm actually closer to the Republican party.
So the truth is that only about 8 to 10% of voters,
or what we call pure independent, which is to say that they wouldn't say that they
lead towards one party or the other.
Independence in a lot of ways are just closet partisans.
We have a very small group of Americans who are truly independent.
And if you actually look at their characteristics, they're very uninformed.
They don't pay attention to the news.
They don't really follow what's going on in politics.
So you can make a pretty convincing argument that they're not independent because they value political independence.
They're independent because they just don't care about politics and they don't care enough
to figure out a third-democratic or Republican.
So what do most voters of any stripe care about the most?
Overwhelmingly, it's almost always the economy. So if you want to understand the fate of a president,
if you want to understand the fate of a congress in terms of party control, the single best
predictor is the same in the economy. But you look at media coverage, the economy often gets
less attention than something like abortion or the culture wars. The problem with the culture war is that it resonates very, very strongly with people who
are loud and angry, and it doesn't resonate with those who are quieter or less willing
to express themselves on social media or in comments on news articles or in social
conversation.
So you get the false impression that the culture war is the single largest divide in America.
Within reality, you just have a very large group of vocal individuals
who are trying to focus on culture war issues.
It's not what average Americans are thinking.
Average Americans today, frankly, are thinking about
how am I going to be able to make it to next month,
given that I've got $300 in my checking account,
or how am I going to pay for this huge tax bill
that I'm getting from the state,
or the county, for my home?
They're not thinking about whether or not we should allow
individuals to compete on sports teams,
if they're not currently identifying with the gender
on their birth certificate.
So do you think that a lot of elected political leaders,
or even the Supreme Court, are they out of touch
with what most Americans care about and what they want?
I think they are.
For the Supreme Court, I don't know if that's a problem necessarily because they're not
meant to be a reflection of American political will.
They're meant to be a reflection of the law.
But for politicians, we certainly
have seen incidents recently where their views
are how to align with the preference of America.
And I think you can see that on both sides of the aisle.
You can see that on immigration.
You can see that on the enforcement of minor property crimes.
You can see that on abortion. You can see that on access to marijuana. You can see that on a
variety of issues where the majority of the public have one attitude. And the politicians who
represent that group of citizens are misaligned, and we don't share that.
Our show is Let's Find Common Ground,
and we're produced by Common Ground Committee,
which is a group that emphasizes the positive aspects of bringing people
of different points of view together, very often political leaders.
Is there a need to find common ground to help repair
the misconceptions that many of us have about the other side?
There is absolutely a common ground and what we know is that when you do humanize
the opposition, when you bring politicians together and demonstrate that they can have, you know,
civil disagreement,
you set norms that the public will follow. It's absolutely necessary.
So we may not necessarily be able to have a
discussion with somebody from the other political party, but if we can watch our elected officials have that discussion for us or have that debate for us,
that can help not only set the norms of how politics should be conducted,
but that can help inform us on the policies themselves,
the positions of the two parties, of the priorities of the two parties.
We certainly want to see individuals exposed to responsible contact between members of the two parties.
It's absolutely critical.
Thank you so much for joining us, Sean, on Let's Find Common Ground.
Yeah, happy to do it.
Professor Sean Westwood on Let's Find Common Ground.
Find all of our episodes online at commongroundcommity.org slash podcasts.
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