Ideological Asymmetries and the Determinants of Politically Motivated Reasoning
Author(s)
Guay, Brian; Johnston, Christopher D.
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A large literature demonstrates that conservatives have greater needs for certainty than liberals. This suggests an asymmetry hypothesis: Conservatives are less open to new information that conflicts with their political identity and, in turn, political accountability will be lower on the right than the left. However, recent work suggests that liberals and conservatives are equally prone to politically motivated reasoning (PMR). The present article confronts this puzzle. First, we identify significant limitations of extant studies evaluating the asymmetry hypothesis and deploy two national survey experiments to address them. Second, we provide the first direct test of the key theoretical claim underpinning the asymmetry hypothesis: epistemic needs for certainty promote PMR. We find little evidence for the asymmetry hypothesis. Importantly, however, we also find no evidence that epistemic needs promote PMR. That is, although conservatives report greater needs for certainty than liberals, these needs are not a major source of political bias.
Date issued
2021-06Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Political Science; Sloan School of ManagementJournal
American Journal of Political Science
Publisher
Wiley
Citation
Guay, Brian and Johnston, Christopher D. 2021. "Ideological Asymmetries and the Determinants of Politically Motivated Reasoning." American Journal of Political Science.
Version: Author's final manuscript
ISSN
0092-5853
1540-5907