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Losing predicts perceptions that elections were decided by fraud, but margin of loss and candidate race do not

Losing predicts perceptions that elections were decided by fraud, but margin of loss and candidate race do not
Losing predicts perceptions that elections were decided by fraud, but margin of loss and candidate race do not

Which factors cause citizens to think that an election was determined by fraud? Fraud beliefs have been shown to be more common among supporters of losing candidates. In the current U.S. context, fraud beliefs are also higher among Republicans than Democrats. However, we know less about the roles of electoral margin and candidate race. Beliefs that candidates won due to fraud might be more likely in closely contested elections, where small shifts in vote share could be decisive, or when non-white candidates defeat white candidates given perceived associations between race and crime or corruption. We examine these questions with a unique survey in which a nationally representative sample (n = 2896) reported their beliefs about the legitimacy of a random subset of 2022 U.S. House election outcomes. Our results indicate that Republican participants are far more likely than are Democrats to believe that House election results were determined by fraud, and that the partisan gap is larger for contests the GOP candidate lost. However, we do not find convincing evidence that these perceptions were driven by the margin by which the losing candidate was defeated or the apparent race of the candidates. These results suggest that party is the dominant factor in perceptions of election legitimacy, trumping losing vote margin and candidate race.

US House elections, Voter fraud, election confidence
0261-3794
Tobin, Cecile
269cfd49-a4ff-40b4-b4b9-53d03c91609c
Aronson, Ben
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Majumder, Sharanya
81f6e4c9-8a9a-497f-90fe-bda5563d1fb8
Tanenbaum, Hannah
9457c8aa-9ecb-4ece-b328-38045192108e
Weber, Ethan
1653ad8b-eaba-499e-b565-065e2f2f3cf1
Carey, John M.
c614ac2e-1650-4043-afab-44970c8d8d49
Fogarty, Brian
2532974e-36d8-45a7-8dfb-3fd4a367412a
Nyhan, Brendan
76e1ec80-0af5-432d-9dd6-f7e8237191e4
Reifler, Jason
426301a1-f90b-470d-a076-04a9d716c491
Tobin, Cecile
269cfd49-a4ff-40b4-b4b9-53d03c91609c
Aronson, Ben
95a0d9f1-6559-425e-8dcf-99ef2ecfe65c
Majumder, Sharanya
81f6e4c9-8a9a-497f-90fe-bda5563d1fb8
Tanenbaum, Hannah
9457c8aa-9ecb-4ece-b328-38045192108e
Weber, Ethan
1653ad8b-eaba-499e-b565-065e2f2f3cf1
Carey, John M.
c614ac2e-1650-4043-afab-44970c8d8d49
Fogarty, Brian
2532974e-36d8-45a7-8dfb-3fd4a367412a
Nyhan, Brendan
76e1ec80-0af5-432d-9dd6-f7e8237191e4
Reifler, Jason
426301a1-f90b-470d-a076-04a9d716c491

Tobin, Cecile, Aronson, Ben, Majumder, Sharanya, Tanenbaum, Hannah, Weber, Ethan, Carey, John M., Fogarty, Brian, Nyhan, Brendan and Reifler, Jason (2024) Losing predicts perceptions that elections were decided by fraud, but margin of loss and candidate race do not. Electoral Studies, 93, [102880]. (doi:10.1016/j.electstud.2024.102880).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Which factors cause citizens to think that an election was determined by fraud? Fraud beliefs have been shown to be more common among supporters of losing candidates. In the current U.S. context, fraud beliefs are also higher among Republicans than Democrats. However, we know less about the roles of electoral margin and candidate race. Beliefs that candidates won due to fraud might be more likely in closely contested elections, where small shifts in vote share could be decisive, or when non-white candidates defeat white candidates given perceived associations between race and crime or corruption. We examine these questions with a unique survey in which a nationally representative sample (n = 2896) reported their beliefs about the legitimacy of a random subset of 2022 U.S. House election outcomes. Our results indicate that Republican participants are far more likely than are Democrats to believe that House election results were determined by fraud, and that the partisan gap is larger for contests the GOP candidate lost. However, we do not find convincing evidence that these perceptions were driven by the margin by which the losing candidate was defeated or the apparent race of the candidates. These results suggest that party is the dominant factor in perceptions of election legitimacy, trumping losing vote margin and candidate race.

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Accepted/In Press date: 7 November 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 21 December 2024
Published date: 24 December 2024
Keywords: US House elections, Voter fraud, election confidence

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 502153
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/502153
ISSN: 0261-3794
PURE UUID: 61c36396-3b62-4d7d-8ffa-c7f2fffa6657
ORCID for Jason Reifler: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1116-7346

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Date deposited: 17 Jun 2025 16:50
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 02:43

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Contributors

Author: Cecile Tobin
Author: Ben Aronson
Author: Sharanya Majumder
Author: Hannah Tanenbaum
Author: Ethan Weber
Author: John M. Carey
Author: Brian Fogarty
Author: Brendan Nyhan
Author: Jason Reifler ORCID iD

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