“I’m Barack Obama and I approve this message”
Female American Voice:
‘Every woman who believes decisions about our bodies and
about our healthcare should be our own is troubled Mitt Romney supports
overturning Roe vs. Wade. Romney backed a law that outlaws all abortion even in
cases of rape and incest. And that’s not all:’ “I’ll cut off funding to plan
parenthood.” ‘For women plan parenthood means lifesaving cancer screenings and
family planning services, but for Mitt Romney:’ “plan parenthood, going to get
rid of that.”
This advertisement sought to strengthen Barack Obama’s
chances for re-election in 2012 through negative campaigning. The advertisement
seeks to draw attention to some of the planned adjustments to policy were Mitt
Romney to be elected. At the beginning of the video President Obama endorses
the message but the narrative of the advert is not spoken by him. This matter
is aimed mainly at women although it is an issue that many men feel strongly
about. Due to the target demographic for this message the narrator is a female American
of what sounds like around 30 years of age. This is far more effective than if
it were to read by a man because for many women the subject of being pro-choice
or pro-life is one heavily riddled with emotion.
‘Message fit: link the content of a message to the
Pre-Existing Beliefs, Experiences, and Knowledge of the Recipient’ occurs in
this advertisement. Bodily autonomy is a belief held by most and by many it is
considered to be a right. The idea of choosing a state leader which would forfeited
their right to bodily autonomy is alarming to most women therefore the way in
which the threat to this idea is coupled with Mitt Romney's election is a most effective one.
In a study on the salience of self-schema on message
evaluation Cacioppo, Petty and Sidera (1982) used 63 participants who
identified themselves using trait adjectives that encompassed either a “religious”
or a “legalistic” person. The
researchers then developed a set of pro-attitudinal messages that were as
persuasive as each other both using weak argumentation. Half of the messages
were devised so as to reflect religious perspectives on the issue being addressed
(abortion, capital punishment) and the other half were designed to reflect more
legalistic perspectives on the issue. Both sets of subjects were then exposed
to legalistic or religious arguments supporting positions that can be deemed as
acceptable as each other (capital punishment). Participants then had to
evaluate how persuasive the communication was and as part of a “curriculum development
project” list their thoughts. The
researchers found that subjects exposed to a schema-relevant message that was argued
in a way that aligned to their own predisposition (legalistic/religious) they
found it far more persuasive and were more positive about the message
overall.
This study was particularly interesting because it provided
reason to extend the heuristic value of ‘self-schemata’ to encompass attitudes
and suggest that the cognitive responses in persuasion are ‘subjectively rather
than objectively rational’.
This is very relevant when we consider the techniques used
in this advertisement to use a pre-existing belief (that of bodily autonomy )
to extend to the attitude regarding presidential candidates.
Negative campaigning is itself a very good example
of the ‘Negativity effect’. This describes the way in which in general, when it
comes to one making judgements about persons issues and things negative
information, positive information receives less weight than negative information (Kanouse & Hanson, 1972). This was even studied within the
context of American politics by Lau in
1982 who found that regarding the US presidential candidates in the 1968, 1972,
and 1980 elections negative information was more persuasive that positive
information. Very interestingly Rozin
and Royzman (2001) reviewed evidence that led them to conclude that this ‘negativity
bias’ is manifested in both animals and humans and that it may in fact be
innate.
The entire piece of footage, from the spoken message to the
use of black and white imagery when Romney is speaking, creates the impression
of threat. There is also agenda setting at play. Through this advertisement the
Obama campaign are also attempting to determine what issues will be discussed
in the up and coming debates in which they will be taking on each other’s
proposed changes to policy. Agenda setting
limits discussion to those issues raised (Plott & Levine, 1978).
Cacioppo, J. T., Petty, R. E., & Sidera, J. (1982). The effects
of a salient self-schema on the evaluation of proattitudinal editorials: Top-down
versus bottom up message processing. Journal
of Experimental Social Psychology, 18,324-338.
Lau, R. (1982). Negativity in political Perception. Political Behaviour, 4,353-377.
Kanouse, D. E., & Hanson, L. R. (1972). Negativity in evaluations. In E. E. Jones, D. E. Kanouse, H. H. Kelley, R. E. Nesbitt, S. Valins, & B. Weiner(Eds.), Attribution: Perceiving the causes of behaviour (pp.47-62). Morristown, NJ: General Learning Press.
Plott, C. R., &
Levine, M. E. (1978). A Model of agenda influence on committee decisions . American Economic Review, 68, 146-160.
Rozin, P., & Royzman, E. B. (2001). Negativity bias,
negativity dominance, and contagion. Personality
and Social Psychology review, 5,296-320.
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