TY - JOUR
T1 - The personalization of politics
T2 - Lessons from the Italian case
AU - Caprara, Gian Vittorio
AU - Schwartz, Shalom H.
AU - Vecchione, Michele
AU - Barbaranelli, Claudio
PY - 2008
Y1 - 2008
N2 - We examine how the traits and values of both candidates and voters contribute to political choice, using the five-factor model of traits and the Schwartz (1992) theory of basic personal values. 1,164 subjects reported their voting intention, their own traits and values, and those they perceived in the leader of one Italian political coalition (center-right or center-left). As hypothesized, voters simplified their personality judgments of politicians. Instead of the 5 trait factors and 10 basic values they employed in self-descriptions, they described the politicians using 2 trait factors (integrity and leadership) and 2 value dimensions (concern for others vs. self and excitement vs. caution). Logistic regressions revealed that voters' own values predicted voting intention as hypothesized based on the policies advocated by the coalitions. Values trumped both own traits and demographic characteristics. The perceived traits and values of candidates accounted for additional variance in voting intention. The traits on which voters perceived a politician as weaker (Prodi's leadership and Berlusconi's integrity) were more decisive in orienting political preferences. We discuss explanations and implications of these findings.
AB - We examine how the traits and values of both candidates and voters contribute to political choice, using the five-factor model of traits and the Schwartz (1992) theory of basic personal values. 1,164 subjects reported their voting intention, their own traits and values, and those they perceived in the leader of one Italian political coalition (center-right or center-left). As hypothesized, voters simplified their personality judgments of politicians. Instead of the 5 trait factors and 10 basic values they employed in self-descriptions, they described the politicians using 2 trait factors (integrity and leadership) and 2 value dimensions (concern for others vs. self and excitement vs. caution). Logistic regressions revealed that voters' own values predicted voting intention as hypothesized based on the policies advocated by the coalitions. Values trumped both own traits and demographic characteristics. The perceived traits and values of candidates accounted for additional variance in voting intention. The traits on which voters perceived a politician as weaker (Prodi's leadership and Berlusconi's integrity) were more decisive in orienting political preferences. We discuss explanations and implications of these findings.
KW - Politics
KW - Traits
KW - Values
KW - Voting
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=51249090071&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1027/1016-9040.13.3.157
DO - 10.1027/1016-9040.13.3.157
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AN - SCOPUS:51249090071
SN - 1016-9040
VL - 13
SP - 157
EP - 172
JO - European Psychologist
JF - European Psychologist
IS - 3
ER -