World

Study: US voter behavior dominated by relief and disgust

September 23, 2020
Naya
Naya

NEW YORK — A study on the US presidential election, conducted by NayaDaya, YouGov, and Statista, shows that US citizens will vote to prevent the undesirable from happening.

The study reveals emotions and behavior of US citizens, evoked by the election of Donald Trump and Mike Pence or Joe Biden and Kamala Harris. The most chosen emotions are relief, disgust, fear, and disappointment — distribution varies between candidates.

“For US voters the election is mostly about avoiding an undesirable result, not about being emotionally uplifted by the candidates,” says Marcello Mortillaro, Ph.D and Senior Scientist, Partner of NayaDaya Inc.

The most chosen emotion for Trump’s re-election is disengaging disgust that indicates violating voters’ moral standards.

Pence is Trump’s reflection: His re-election evokes even more disgust but overall less emotions. In Biden’s case, the most common emotion is relief, implying avoidance of a threat.

Mortillaro explains: “As for Biden, almost half of Democrats feel relief, a positive emotion with a low engaging impact. Harris is unlike Biden. She arouses positive, engaging emotions of pride, admiration and joy.”

Among Republicans, disgust and fear are the strongest emotions toward both Harris’ and Biden’s elections.

The NayaDaya Emotional and Behavioral Intelligence, which is based on scientific research independently conducted by the University of Geneva, Switzerland, was used to analyze the US voter emotions.

Voter emotions predict voter behavior and engagement — percentages for loyals: Trump 32%; Pence 27%; Biden 45%; Harris 42%.

Among the young (18-34), 47% are loyal to Biden, 27% to Trump. Among the African-Americans, 58% are loyal to Biden, only 13% to Trump. More than a quarter of respondents are not in favor of Democrats or Republicans; 31% of them are positively engaged in Trump, 37% in Biden.

“In the context of significant phenomena like presidential elections, emotions are our key to understanding different perspectives and their behavioral consequences.

Through data, insight, empathy, and impact we empower responsible leaders, media, brands, and organizations to thrive and shape the world,” said Timo Järvinen, CEO and co-founder of NayaDaya Inc.

Study facts

• Data was collected as an online survey through the YouGov panel in the US Sept 2-4, 2020

• The quota sampling was implemented on the basis of age, gender, and geographic location to represent the overall US adult population

• Other variables are race, education, income, marital status, social networks, and party preference

• N=1265, margin of error ±2.5 percentage points. — SG


September 23, 2020
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