Asymmetric Responsiveness: The Effects of Protesters’ Demographics and Policy Preferences on the Political Agenda
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Date
2024-11
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Abstract
Previous research predicts that politicians are responsive to citizens with whom they share demographics or policy preferences. I
argue that protests are particularly susceptible to politicians’ di!erential responsiveness. First, protesters’ demographics are relatively easy
to identify, potentially increasing politicians’ felt responsibility to respond to protesters they descriptively represent. Second, protests are
often perceived as less legitimate than other forms of participation,
justifying politicians’ responsiveness to those they substantively represent. In a pre-registered experiment, I tested how 1124 Swedish local
politicians respond to protests that vary in who is protesting and what
policy demands they raise. Uncertainty is large around the e!ect of
shared demographics. In contrast, shared policy preferences increase
responsiveness asymmetrically: Left-wing politicians are more responsive but show greater di!erentiation, favoring co-partisan protesters
over others. Exploratory analyses reveal that politicians’ priors on
protest legitimacy explain why right-wing politicians di!erentiate less
and are less responsive to protests, even right-wing protests.