Abstract
Using the most extensive dataset available on the 2008 election, I examine the impact of dog ownership on presidential vote preference. Canines were elevated to the status of a campaign issue when, during the 2008 campaign, Barack Obama publicly promised his daughters a dog after the election was over, a campaign promise that has since been fulfilled. However, this announcement appears to have unintentionally highlighted the absence of a key point of potential identification between this candidate and voters, and thus to have significantly undermined the likelihood that dog-owning voters would support Obama. I elaborate upon the implications of this finding for future presidential candidates. Copyright © American Political Science Association 2010.
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CITATION STYLE
Mutz, D. C. (2010). The dog that didn’t bark: The role of canines in the 2008 campaign. PS - Political Science and Politics, 43(4), 707–712. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1049096510001125
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