Moral licence and disbelief: how voters look past political misconduct

How do voters respond to a co-partisan political candidate after hearing about a serious scandal? We apply qualitative content analysis to open-ended text responses collected from survey respondents, focusing on 159 respondents who remain willing to vote for a hypothetical male candidate after learn...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inPolitical research exchange Vol. 6; no. 1
Main Authors Savani, Manu M., Collignon, Sofia
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Taylor & Francis Group 31.12.2024
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Summary:How do voters respond to a co-partisan political candidate after hearing about a serious scandal? We apply qualitative content analysis to open-ended text responses collected from survey respondents, focusing on 159 respondents who remain willing to vote for a hypothetical male candidate after learning that allegations of sexual harassment against him were settled out of court. We uncover two main strategies by which respondents explained and justified their willingness to look past the misconduct allegations. The dominant strategy was to extend moral licence to the candidate based on his prior good deeds; a second prominent strategy was to disbelieve and reject the allegations. Our findings offer new insights on why some political candidates and careers appear untroubled by even serious allegations of misconduct, and frames new research avenues on which voters might be more likely to extend moral licence and in what circumstances.
ISSN:2474-736X
2474-736X
DOI:10.1080/2474736X.2024.2383409