What Went Down On The Final Night Of The DNC
Does A Negative Approach Work?
So far, the DNC has focused heavily on the shortcomings of the Trump administration. There have been stories about how immigration policies and the president’s handling of the COVID-19 pandemic have affected individuals and families. Former presidents also offered their criticisms: Bill Clinton denounced Trump’s lack of leadership on the pandemic, and Barack Obama went even further, calling Trump a threat to the Constitution and American democracy.
Is this kind of negativity a good strategy, though? Possibly. It’s conventional wisdom that negativity turns voters off, and some early experimental research on the subject backs this up. But it’s not clear that this is always true. Negative advertising sometimes actually improves voter turnout. Furthermore, what political scientists call negative partisanship — party identification that’s mostly about disliking the other party — can help unify partisans. Provoking negative emotions like anger can also help mobilize voters and get them to the polls. So all this negativity might strike a somber tone, but it might also be a wise strategic move for the Democrats.
Democrats are really leaning in on Biden as healer-in-chief. This is good marketing for them.
Aside from being a very relatable and sympathetic story (so many families have been touched by cancer), Biden’s son’s death played a significant role in his political career. When he chose not to run in 2016, he said it was in part due to Beau’s death.
