Article

Communicating on electoral platforms

Gabrielle Demange et Karine Van Der Straeten

Résumé

This paper proposes an analysis of strategic communication on platforms by candidates during an electoral campaign. A candidate's platform in a (possibly) multidimensional policy space is fixed, but is imperfectly known by voters. A candidate strategically decides the emphasis he puts on the various issues, and thus the precision of the information he conveys to voters on his position on each issue. We show that if voters are fully rational, then all the relevant information is revealed at equilibrium, whatever the candidate's true position. We then study a model of boundedly rational voters, who take at face value the messages sent by the politicians, without being able to decipher their strategies. If voters are boundedly rational in this sense, a politician will not transmit all the relevant information; his communication strategy will depend on both the prior in the electorate and his true positions (unknown to the electorate). In particular, we show that candidates address all issues with positive probability, but tend to talk more often on issues on which they are a priori congruent with the representative voter, thereby providing a “nuanced” version of Petrocik's “issue ownership theory”.

Mots-clés

Electoral platforms; Information transmission; Issue emphasis; Political ambiguity; Bounded rationality;

Codes JEL

  • C70: General
  • D72: Political Processes: Rent-Seeking, Lobbying, Elections, Legislatures, and Voting Behavior
  • D82: Asymmetric and Private Information • Mechanism Design
  • D83: Search • Learning • Information and Knowledge • Communication • Belief

Remplace

Gabrielle Demange et Karine Van Der Straeten, « A communication game on electoral platforms », TSE Working Paper, n° 09-112, 23 novembre 2009.

Référence

Gabrielle Demange et Karine Van Der Straeten, « Communicating on electoral platforms », Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, vol. 174, juin 2020, p. 402–419.

Publié dans

Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, vol. 174, juin 2020, p. 402–419