Article(print)1999

News Coverage, Economic Cues, and the Public's Presidential Preferences, 1984-1996

In: The journal of politics: JOP, Volume 61, Issue 4, p. 914-943

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Abstract

Much research demonstrates the importance of national, rather than personal, yet relatively unexplored is how citizens develop what scholars have called "rough evaluations" of the economy. We argue that campaign news coverage about the nation's economic health provides cues to the public; in turn, these cues supply the criteria for sociotropic voting, thereby shaping presidential preferences during the course of campaigns. Examining news stories in each of the past four presidential elections, we (1) categorize as economic or noneconomic, (2) measure its volume & valence, & (3) model candidate coverage, against presidential preference polls. Results suggest that economic candidate coverage, although accounting for only a fraction content, strongly & consistently predicts variation in presidential preference during all four elections, suggesting that voters gain sociotropic criteria for evaluating candidates from news media coverage of campaigns. 5 Tables, 6 Figures, 50 References. Adapted from the source document.

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