Church or state? Reassessing how religion shapes impressions of candidate positions

The literature largely assumes that a candidate’s religious affiliation sends signals about his or her ideological leanings and policy preferences. We contend that prior works have not sufficiently accounted for the effects of the party label. Using an original experimental design that manipulates b...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Elizabeth N. Simas, Adam L. Ozer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2017-06-01
Series:Research & Politics
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2053168017716548
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spelling doaj-5ee08a5f9f954f63bab367d709ef78f12020-11-25T03:09:33ZengSAGE PublishingResearch & Politics2053-16802017-06-01410.1177/2053168017716548Church or state? Reassessing how religion shapes impressions of candidate positionsElizabeth N. SimasAdam L. OzerThe literature largely assumes that a candidate’s religious affiliation sends signals about his or her ideological leanings and policy preferences. We contend that prior works have not sufficiently accounted for the effects of the party label. Using an original experimental design that manipulates both religion and party, we show that the effects of a religious cue are more limited than previously implied. Though Evangelical and Catholic cues do impact impressions of a candidate’s stance on abortion, the partisan cue dominates perceptions of overall ideology. These findings further demonstrate the power of the party brand and are more consistent with research arguing for the non-policy value of the religion heuristic.https://doi.org/10.1177/2053168017716548
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Elizabeth N. Simas
Adam L. Ozer
spellingShingle Elizabeth N. Simas
Adam L. Ozer
Church or state? Reassessing how religion shapes impressions of candidate positions
Research & Politics
author_facet Elizabeth N. Simas
Adam L. Ozer
author_sort Elizabeth N. Simas
title Church or state? Reassessing how religion shapes impressions of candidate positions
title_short Church or state? Reassessing how religion shapes impressions of candidate positions
title_full Church or state? Reassessing how religion shapes impressions of candidate positions
title_fullStr Church or state? Reassessing how religion shapes impressions of candidate positions
title_full_unstemmed Church or state? Reassessing how religion shapes impressions of candidate positions
title_sort church or state? reassessing how religion shapes impressions of candidate positions
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Research & Politics
issn 2053-1680
publishDate 2017-06-01
description The literature largely assumes that a candidate’s religious affiliation sends signals about his or her ideological leanings and policy preferences. We contend that prior works have not sufficiently accounted for the effects of the party label. Using an original experimental design that manipulates both religion and party, we show that the effects of a religious cue are more limited than previously implied. Though Evangelical and Catholic cues do impact impressions of a candidate’s stance on abortion, the partisan cue dominates perceptions of overall ideology. These findings further demonstrate the power of the party brand and are more consistent with research arguing for the non-policy value of the religion heuristic.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2053168017716548
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