Beyond Observational Relationships: Evidence from a Ten-Country Experiment that Policy Disputes Cause Affective Polarization

Noam Gidron*, James Adams, Will Horne, Thomas Tichelbaecker

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

While scholars document associations between competing parties’ policy disputes and citizens’ cross-party hostility, that is, affective polarization, we lack causal comparative evidence of how different types of ideological disagreements shape partisan affective evaluations. We investigate this issue with a priming experiment across ten Western publics, which prompts some respondents to answer questions inviting them to discuss debates over either cultural or economic issues versus a control group that receives a nonpolitical prompt. Respondents in the economic and cultural priming conditions expressed greater distrust of out-partisans, and, among respondents who received cultural priming, those who discussed immigration in their open-ended responses expressed far more distrust towards opponents – an effect driven by right-wing respondents who discussed immigration. These findings provide comparative evidence that economic and cultural debates cause affective polarization, with immigration as a primary cultural driver.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere84
JournalBritish Journal of Political Science
Volume55
DOIs
StatePublished - 30 May 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s), 2025.

Keywords

  • affective polarization
  • ideology
  • immigration
  • partisan distrust

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