Losers lose more than winners win: Asymmetrical effects of winning and losing in elections

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Abstract

Being on the winning or the losing side in elections has important consequences for voters’ perceptions of democracy. This article contributes to the existing literature by showing that being on the losing side has persistent effects over a surprisingly long time. Based on a dataset that measures voters’ satisfaction with democracy three years after elections were held, it first shows that losers are significantly more dissatisfied with democracy than winners on both input and output side measures of perceptions of democracy. Furthermore, the article shows that turning from winning to losing has significant negative effects on voters’ satisfaction, and that this finding is robust across a number of different specifications. These results are remarkable given that the data used is from Denmark – a country that constitutes a least-likely case for finding effects of being on the winning or the losing side.

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Hansen, S. W., Klemmensen, R., & Serritzlew, S. (2019). Losers lose more than winners win: Asymmetrical effects of winning and losing in elections. European Journal of Political Research, 58(4), 1172–1190. https://doi.org/10.1111/1475-6765.12329

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