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Stigmatized campaign practices and the gendered dynamics of electoral viability

Stigmatized campaign practices and the gendered dynamics of electoral viability
Stigmatized campaign practices and the gendered dynamics of electoral viability
What happens when a traditional source of political capital becomes a health hazard? Stigmatized electoral practices, such as vote buying, are a double-edged sword: While these strategies may signal candidates’ electoral strength, they may also entail reputational costs. In normal times, street campaigns are a non-stigmatized electoral practice. During the Covid-19 pandemic, however, they imposed health risks. Employing data from a national survey experiment conducted in Brazil prior to the 2020 municipal elections (N = 2025), we extend research on the employment of stigmatized campaigns and the gendered dynamics of electoral viability. We find that voters evaluate candidates who engage in face-to-face activities as less electorally viable and report lower intent to support them. These dynamics do not impact all candidates equally: Voters more harshly punish women candidates who conduct street campaigns than men, leading women to lose the advantage they have over men when both employ non-stigmatized campaign practices.
376-399
Borges Martins da Silva, Mariana
ea921c95-b54f-4a2f-928c-3d5b19ad07c2
A.C. Gatto, Malu
de67d62a-c80c-4409-aa05-25681609ff0b
Borges Martins da Silva, Mariana
ea921c95-b54f-4a2f-928c-3d5b19ad07c2
A.C. Gatto, Malu
de67d62a-c80c-4409-aa05-25681609ff0b

Borges Martins da Silva, Mariana and A.C. Gatto, Malu (2021) Stigmatized campaign practices and the gendered dynamics of electoral viability. Journal of Politics in Latin America, 13 (3), 376-399. (doi:10.1177/1866802X21105873).

Record type: Article

Abstract

What happens when a traditional source of political capital becomes a health hazard? Stigmatized electoral practices, such as vote buying, are a double-edged sword: While these strategies may signal candidates’ electoral strength, they may also entail reputational costs. In normal times, street campaigns are a non-stigmatized electoral practice. During the Covid-19 pandemic, however, they imposed health risks. Employing data from a national survey experiment conducted in Brazil prior to the 2020 municipal elections (N = 2025), we extend research on the employment of stigmatized campaigns and the gendered dynamics of electoral viability. We find that voters evaluate candidates who engage in face-to-face activities as less electorally viable and report lower intent to support them. These dynamics do not impact all candidates equally: Voters more harshly punish women candidates who conduct street campaigns than men, leading women to lose the advantage they have over men when both employ non-stigmatized campaign practices.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 16 November 2021

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 501251
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/501251
PURE UUID: f28e191a-a04c-4980-9f58-405f014721ff
ORCID for Mariana Borges Martins da Silva: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2690-5006

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Date deposited: 28 May 2025 16:30
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 02:41

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Contributors

Author: Mariana Borges Martins da Silva ORCID iD
Author: Malu A.C. Gatto

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