Posted on 06/24/2008 10:25:19 AM PDT by neverdem
In November 2004, Christian Wheeler stood in line at a local church and waited to cast his ballot in the US presidential election, which pitted President George W. Bush against the democratic candidate, John Kerry. As Wheeler waited, his thoughts began to wander.
I was thinking about the election and how Bush was highly affiliated with religion, says Wheeler, and it occurred to me that this church couldnt possibly be a neutral location. This has to be affecting peoples thoughts.
So Wheeler, a professor of marketing at Stanford University in California, decided to study whether the location of a polling station can influence how people vote. The results, published this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 1, suggest that his early musings may have been correct: in an Arizona election, those who voted in schools were slightly more likely to support a proposition to increase funding for education.
The results add further detail to the already complex picture of the influences on voters' behaviour. We used to think that voting was a simple process where people gathered information about a candidate and made a decision before they got to the voting booth, says Jon Krosnick, a social scientist at Stanford University who was not affiliated with this study. We now know thats not true. Some arrive at the booth conflicted, or havent thought it through. They confront that ballot and need to make a decision with very little time and information.
This leaves voters more vulnerable to being swayed by their surroundings. Election planners often try to minimize outside influences by shuffling the order in which choices are presented on the ballots, and requiring campaigners to remain a specified distance away from the polling place.
But Wheelers findings suggest that more subtle environmental cues can also influence voter behaviour.
Tough choices
In the United States, elections are not always as simple as selecting candidates for public office. Voters may also be asked to weigh propositions that can range from simple social issues to complex funding decisions. In some states, voters receive election guides that can be well over 100 pages long, detailing the text of the propositions as well as arguments for and against each one.
Wheeler and his colleagues decided to study the 2000 general election results from Arizona. In addition to selecting the president and other elected officials, voters also cast ballots for several propositions. One proposed to increase the rate of sales tax to raise money for education.
The researchers found that 56% of people who were assigned by their local election commission to vote in a school supported the education initiative. But among those who did not vote in schools, 54% voted in favour of the education proposal.
That difference shrank to 1% when other mitigating factors, such as whether voters lived near schools, were taken into account. It's a small difference, notes Krosnick, but could still be significant. In our current elections, this type of effect is certainly big enough to reverse an election outcome, he says.
Primed response
In a separate experiment, the researchers enrolled 327 participants and asked them to view a series of pictures and then vote on a proposal that was identical to the Arizona education initiative. Those who had seen pictures of schools beforehand were more likely to support the school funding initiative.
Further analysis showed that certain participants such as those who were parents were more likely to vote for the school initiative regardless of whether they had been primed with pictures of schools. But the difference between parents and non-parents disappeared if non-parents were shown images of schools ahead of time.
Despite these effects, no one in the study thought the images had affected their vote.
Although he feels the study is valuable, Krosnick struggles to come to terms with the simplicity of the results. Not everyone has a good association with schools, he notes. Lots of people have bad experiences with schools, he says. and that might make them a little less favorable to the initiative. It will be important to extend the work to additional elections in other states, he says, to determine just how universal the response is.
If it is true, it would be an amazing insight into the political process, says Krosnick. It would be a mechanism by which nefarious people could influence election outcomes.
I have to vote on the wrong side of the tracks, literally.
Which is good reason to have computer voting from home. Or to allow voting over a weekend or a week at the local firehouse.
But then someone would find a firehouse offensive or negative.
It’s a no win situation.
Well, we should all be informed voters and have our minds made up before we enter the voting booth. We should do a little homework on candidates and ballot initiatives so we know what we’re voting for.
I don’t know what to say if voters become conflicted when confronted with a ballot, and they haven’t done any research into ballot initiatives. If they are voting in a school, that will influence them to vote for a bond issue for schools?
I hate to think some people are so easily swayed. I would hope that all of us do some research before we go vote.
I may be a minority opinion, but I’m not too concerned that voter turnout is not as high as some other countries. I figure if some people don’t follow the news and politics, their votes won’t be based on any kind of reasoning or thought process anyway. And they won’t know the candidates or the issues, so they shouldn’t vote anyway. I don’t want uninformed people canceling out my vote because they don’t know what the issues are.
I have observed that the dead are influenced by inner city voting locations to vote for Democrat candidates, not quite sure why.
My precinct in Minneapolis is in a Lutheran Church.
Bush-Cheney got swamped there in ‘04.
Looking at the numbers from surrounding precincts, it really didn’t matter whether the voting location was in a church or school.
In short, there was no discernible difference one way or the other.
I vote at the local volunteer fire department firehouse and I always want to turn a hose on the Democrats.
And with that comment the professor became a variable in his own "study."
The whole notion is preposterous. Liberals see the religious bogeymen under every rock.
It is funny that they are tacitly admitting that they are on the wrong side of what God would deem to be “right”.
In Ohio, I was “offended” by the fact that I voted in a frickin UAW Union hall.
Talk about being in enemy territory...
Gosh, would it make him happier if we all voted at abortion clinics?
I vote in my home; get early ballot.
I vote in my home; get early ballot.
Did you have an “advisor” step into the booth with you to “help” you vote?
In Philadelphia there are numerous polling places in union halls, homes of Democratic state representatives and senators, and other wonderful “unbiased” places. And we wonder why Philly always votes 80%+ for the Democrat?
Good, now let’s make every public toilet a polling place in the interest of truth in advertising.
In all seriousness, if a Fire Dept. tax increase or bond issue were on the ballot, I could see why the opposition would be unhappy.
Not all churches are conservative, not by a long shot.
If the conservative churches “influence” one way, I’m sure the liberal churches more than make up for the difference.
And if the location of your polling place makes you change your mind, you probably should not be voting, anyway.
I’d vote the same way whether at the Communist Party Headquarters or my own church basement.
No, but they did get busted one year for having campaign signs (Dem of course) less than 100 feet from the door.
And that is the reason why the franchise used to be limited.
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