Legislator criticism of a candidate’s conspiracy beliefs reduces support for the conspiracy but not the candidate: evidence from Marjorie Taylor Greene and QAnon
Legislator criticism of a candidate’s conspiracy beliefs reduces support for the conspiracy but not the candidate: evidence from Marjorie Taylor Greene and QAnon
In November 2020, Georgia Republican Marjorie Taylor Greene became the first open supporter of QAnon to be elected to the United States Congress. Despite criticism from Democrats, Republicans, and the media for her belief in this dangerous conspiracy theory, Greene remains a prominent national figure and a member of Congress. In a large survey experiment examining the effects of criticisms of Greene by different sources, we found that criticism of Greene from a Republican or a Democratic official reduced positive feelings toward QAnon but not Greene herself. However, unsourced criticisms and criticisms from media figures failed to measurably affect feelings toward either Greene or QAnon. Our results suggest that public officials have a unique responsibility to criticize misinformation, but they also highlight the difficulty in shifting attitudes toward politicians who embrace and spread falsehoods.
Wu, Victor
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Carey, John
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Guess, Andrew
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Nyhan, Brendan
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Reifler, Jason
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1 September 2022
Wu, Victor
593496dd-98dc-4fa4-9ef8-21cfcc0e664c
Carey, John
8b52e3c5-3852-482f-a6a9-7b1be6c8d8b7
Guess, Andrew
f3c9eae6-bcd8-4bb0-8b53-0bcf5394fc6c
Nyhan, Brendan
76e1ec80-0af5-432d-9dd6-f7e8237191e4
Reifler, Jason
426301a1-f90b-470d-a076-04a9d716c491
Wu, Victor, Carey, John, Guess, Andrew, Nyhan, Brendan and Reifler, Jason
(2022)
Legislator criticism of a candidate’s conspiracy beliefs reduces support for the conspiracy but not the candidate: evidence from Marjorie Taylor Greene and QAnon.
HKS Misinformation Review, 3 (5).
Abstract
In November 2020, Georgia Republican Marjorie Taylor Greene became the first open supporter of QAnon to be elected to the United States Congress. Despite criticism from Democrats, Republicans, and the media for her belief in this dangerous conspiracy theory, Greene remains a prominent national figure and a member of Congress. In a large survey experiment examining the effects of criticisms of Greene by different sources, we found that criticism of Greene from a Republican or a Democratic official reduced positive feelings toward QAnon but not Greene herself. However, unsourced criticisms and criticisms from media figures failed to measurably affect feelings toward either Greene or QAnon. Our results suggest that public officials have a unique responsibility to criticize misinformation, but they also highlight the difficulty in shifting attitudes toward politicians who embrace and spread falsehoods.
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wu_conspiracy_greene_qanon_20220901
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Accepted/In Press date: 10 August 2022
Published date: 1 September 2022
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Local EPrints ID: 500602
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/500602
PURE UUID: 72d4add7-7c79-4695-925a-c7d28b2ae04d
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Date deposited: 06 May 2025 17:00
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 02:43
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Contributors
Author:
Victor Wu
Author:
John Carey
Author:
Andrew Guess
Author:
Brendan Nyhan
Author:
Jason Reifler
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