We investigate the effects of populist messages that (a) stress the centrality of "ordinary"people, (b) shift blame to the "corrupt"elites, or (c) combine people centrality and antielitist cues on 3 dimensions of populist attitudes: anti-elitism, homogeneous people, and popular sovereignty. We conducted an extensive 15-country experiment in which we manipulated populist communication as social identity frames (N = 7,271). Multilevel analyses demonstrate that messages stressing the centrality of the ordinary people activate all dimensions of populist attitudes. In contrast, anti-elite messages activate anti-elitism attitudes only for those individuals with lower levels of education and extreme positions on the ideological left right spectrum. Our findings suggest that populist political communication plays a key role in activating populist attitudes across Europe.
CITATION STYLE
Hameleers, M., Schmuck, D., Schulz, A., Wirz, D. S., Matthes, J., Bos, L., … Andreadis, I. (2021). The Effects of Populist Identity Framing on Populist Attitudes across Europe: Evidence from a 15-Country Comparative Experiment. International Journal of Public Opinion Research, 33(3), 491–510. https://doi.org/10.1093/ijpor/edaa018
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