The willingness of voters on the losing side to accept electoral outcomes – losers’ consent – is essential to democratic legitimacy. This article examines the role of emotions in shaping people’s perceptions of electoral fairness, arguing that voters on the losing side who feel angry are less willing to accept democratic outcomes. This is examined in the context of the 2016 Brexit referendum, as well as the 2019 UK general election, using original survey data and an experiment in which specific emotional responses (anger and happiness) are induced to test the causal effect of emotions. The results show that losers who felt angry about an electoral outcome are less likely to accept the legitimacy of the democratic process and that anger has ...
Accepting defeat in the aftermath of elections is crucial for the stability of democracies. But in t...
Resentment is a complex, multi-layered emotion, within which perceptions of unfairness and feelings ...
First published online: 17 September 2020We consider the role of values as determinants of voting in...
The willingness of voters on the losing side to accept electoral outcomes – losers’ consent – is ess...
Why do some voters accept their defeat and agree to a democratic verdict while some do not? This dis...
What is the emotional impact of extraordinary events and how do they shape subsequent electoral outc...
Why do some voters accept their defeat and agree to a democratic verdict while some do not? This dis...
We investigate varieties of dissatisfaction by examining how the similar, yet distinct emotions of r...
How do emotional responses influence the choices of voters? Markus Wagner writes on the role of emot...
To understand voting behaviour, we must consider voters' emotions and their interaction with elector...
The 2016 European Union referendum campaign has been depicted as a battle between ‘heads’ and ‘heart...
Does being a member of the EU make you angry, anxious, uneasy or hopeful? The evidence put forward b...
Online social network platforms have been, since their rise to prominence, considered as relevant ga...
Discrete emotions such as anger, pride, worry, and hopefulness have been shown to predict candidate ...
Resentment is a complex, multi‐layered emotion, within which perceptions of unfairness and feelings ...
Accepting defeat in the aftermath of elections is crucial for the stability of democracies. But in t...
Resentment is a complex, multi-layered emotion, within which perceptions of unfairness and feelings ...
First published online: 17 September 2020We consider the role of values as determinants of voting in...
The willingness of voters on the losing side to accept electoral outcomes – losers’ consent – is ess...
Why do some voters accept their defeat and agree to a democratic verdict while some do not? This dis...
What is the emotional impact of extraordinary events and how do they shape subsequent electoral outc...
Why do some voters accept their defeat and agree to a democratic verdict while some do not? This dis...
We investigate varieties of dissatisfaction by examining how the similar, yet distinct emotions of r...
How do emotional responses influence the choices of voters? Markus Wagner writes on the role of emot...
To understand voting behaviour, we must consider voters' emotions and their interaction with elector...
The 2016 European Union referendum campaign has been depicted as a battle between ‘heads’ and ‘heart...
Does being a member of the EU make you angry, anxious, uneasy or hopeful? The evidence put forward b...
Online social network platforms have been, since their rise to prominence, considered as relevant ga...
Discrete emotions such as anger, pride, worry, and hopefulness have been shown to predict candidate ...
Resentment is a complex, multi‐layered emotion, within which perceptions of unfairness and feelings ...
Accepting defeat in the aftermath of elections is crucial for the stability of democracies. But in t...
Resentment is a complex, multi-layered emotion, within which perceptions of unfairness and feelings ...
First published online: 17 September 2020We consider the role of values as determinants of voting in...