What the study found
The study found that voters in Canada often have ideological self-placement that does not align with their policy positions, especially among right-leaning individuals. Even so, they still use left-right ideological labels to infer candidates’ policy stances when policy information is missing.
Why the authors say this matters
The authors conclude that these findings matter for theories of political decision-making beyond the United States. They also suggest the results have implications for substantive representation in systems with centrist or ideologically flexible parties.
What the researchers tested
The researchers examined how voters use left-right ideological labels as shortcuts for policy positions when evaluating electoral candidates. They distinguished between maximal ideological thinking, where voters use ideological proximity as a proxy for policy congruence, and minimal ideological thinking, where voters use labels only to infer candidates’ positions. They drew on original experimental data from Canada, based on 1,087 respondents.
What worked and what didn't
The evidence supported the Minimal Theory: voters used ideological proximity to infer candidates’ policy stances when no policy information was available. The study also found that voters’ ideological self-placement was often misaligned with their policy positions, particularly among right-leaning individuals. The abstract does not report support for the stronger maximal form of ideological thinking.
What to keep in mind
The study uses experimental data from Canada, so the abstract’s claims are based on that setting. The abstract does not describe additional limitations, and it does not provide details on the experimental design beyond the sample size and broad focus.
Key points
- Voters often used left-right labels to infer candidates’ policy positions when policy information was absent.
- Voters’ ideological self-placement was often not aligned with their policy preferences, especially among right-leaning respondents.
- The findings supported a minimal view of ideological thinking rather than a stronger proxy-based version.
- The study was based on original experimental data from 1,087 people in Canada.
- The authors say the findings have implications for political decision-making theories beyond the United States.
Disclosure
- Research title:
- Voters use ideological labels to infer candidate policy positions
- Authors:
- Sarah Lachance, Clareta Treger
- Institutions:
- Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Oldham Council
- Publication date:
- 2026-03-29
- OpenAlex record:
- View
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