Publication | Open Access
Motivated reasoning and policy information: politicians are more resistant to debiasing interventions than the general public
56
Citations
48
References
2020
Year
Behavioral Decision MakingPolitical ProcessPublic OpinionPolitical BehaviorPublic ChoiceSocial SciencesBiasPolicy InformationPolitical CommunicationCognitive Bias MitigationUnconscious BiasPolitical CognitionElection ForecastingPublic PolicyPrior BeliefsPersuasionBias DetectionMotivated ReasoningPolitical AttitudesPolitical AgendaGeneral PublicAccountabilityArtsPolitical ScienceOther People
Abstract A growing body of evidence shows that politicians use motivated reasoning to fit evidence with prior beliefs. In this, they are not unlike other people. We use survey experiments to reaffirm prior work showing that politicians, like the public they represent, engage in motivated reasoning. However, we also show that politicians are more resistant to debiasing interventions than others. When required to justify their evaluations, politicians rely more on prior political attitudes and less on policy information, increasing the probability of erroneous decisions. The results raise the troubling implication that the specialized role of elected officials makes them more immune to the correction of biases, and in this way less representative of the voters they serve when they process policy information.
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