Faculty Publications
Does Presidential Rhetoric Matter?: Priming and Presidential Approval
Document Type
Article
Journal/Book/Conference Title
Presidential Studies Quarterly
Volume
34
Issue
4
First Page
755
Last Page
778
Abstract
The public's approval of the president plays a critical role in determining the president's power and policy-making success. Scholars and pundits have thus devoted a large amount of attention to explaining the dynamics of presidential approval. Surprisingly, this work has overlooked one of the more important potential forces behind approval—that is, what the president himself says. In this article, we examine the direct impact of presidential rhetoric on approval. We do so by combining a content analysis of the 2002 State of the Union address with both a laboratory experiment and a nationally representative survey. We show that the president can have a substantial effect on his own approval by priming the criteria on which citizens base their approval evaluations. Our results add a new dimension to the study of presidential approval, raise intriguing questions about accountability, and extend work on priming and public opinion by introducing the idea of image priming.
Department
Department of Political Science
Original Publication Date
12-1-2004
DOI of published version
10.1111/j.1741-5705.2004.00222.x
Recommended Citation
Holmes, Justin W. and Druckman, James N., "Does Presidential Rhetoric Matter?: Priming and Presidential Approval" (2004). Faculty Publications. 6225.
https://scholarworks.uni.edu/facpub/6225