Confidence in US Elections After the Big Lie

Shaun Bowler, Todd Donovan

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

This paper examines how individual-level partisanship and state-level factors affect perceptions of electoral integrity in the United States. We find that evaluations of the integrity of the 2020 US presidential election national outcome were only modestly conditioned by the quality of election administration in a person’s state. Perceptions of electoral legitimacy were much more substantially conditioned by motivated reasoning associated with a person’s partisanship, the partisan context Republicans resided in, and Republican partisans’ residence in a swing-state where final results from 2020 were delayed due to late-counted ballots. Overall, estimated effects of the quality of election administration on confidence in elections are null or modest. Partisan factors associated with Donald Trump’s “Big Lie” about the 2020 US presidential election were the strongest forces predicting lack of confidence in US elections and perceptions that election officials were altering results. These factors were not evident in 2016. We discuss how these findings may reflect a fundamental alteration of attitudes among Republican voters and elites about the legitimacy of democratic elections in the US, rather than reflecting cyclical variation in partisan confidence associated with which party won the past election.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)283-296
Number of pages14
JournalPolitical Research Quarterly
Volume77
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 2024

ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

  • Sociology and Political Science

Keywords

  • confidence in elections
  • Donald Trump
  • electoral integrity
  • public opinion

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