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Great Debates: The Televised Leadership Debates of 1979*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 November 2009
Abstract
This article examines the structure and setting of Encounter '79, the televised debates between party leaders which took place a week prior to the 1979 federal election, and considers the possible impact of this event on individual voting behaviour and on the outcome of that election. Using data from the 1979 National Election Study to measure exposure to the debates and perceptions of their content, it is argued that much of the potential effect is limited by public exposure to other political information through television and by the tendencies of such events to reinforce existing attitudes. The direct effects, if any, are more likely to be on participation than on voting decisions.
Résumé
Ce travail examine la structure et la mise en place de Rencontre '79 (les débats des chefs de partis télédiffusés une semaine avant les élections fédérates de 1979), ainsi que l'impact éventuel de cet événement sur le vote individuel et sur le résultat global de ces éléctions'. L'utilisation des données de l'Etude sur les élections nationales de 1979 pour mesurer la popularité et la perception du contenu de ces débats permet de croire que l'impact possible a été affaibli par la quantité d'informations politiques autrement transmises au public par la télévision. L'impact des débats a également été diminué par les tendences de ces rencontres à renforcer des positions déjà existantes. Les effets directs, s'il en est, affectent plus probablement la participation des électeurs plutôt que leur décision finale dans les bureaux de scrutin.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Canadian Journal of Political Science/Revue canadienne de science politique , Volume 18 , Issue 1 , March 1985 , pp. 135 - 153
- Copyright
- Copyright © Canadian Political Science Association (l'Association canadienne de science politique) and/et la Société québécoise de science politique 1985
References
1 Steven Chaffee and Jack Dennis, “Presidential Debates: An Empirical Assessment,” in Ranney, Austin (ed.), The Past and Future of Presidential Debates (Washington: American Enterprise Institute, 1980), 75–101.Google Scholar
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11 The 1979 National Election Study was directed by Harold Clarke, Jane Jenson, Lawrence LeDuc and Jon Pammett, and was funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council. Field work was conducted by Canadian Facts, Ltd. The study consisted of extensive personal interviews with a national sample of 2,743 eligible Canadian voters immediately following the 1979 federal election. Included in this sample was a panel of 1,338 respondents who were first interviewed in 1974, and a supplementary sample of 149 new voters between the ages of 18 and 23 who were eligible to vote for the first time in 1979. Two questions regarding the debates were asked of a random half-sample of the electorate in this study. The first of these was asked as part of a sequence of campaign activity items: “Did you see the debates between the party leaders on television on Sunday, May 13th?” The second, asked only of those who responded affirmatively to the foregoing question, was: “What were your impressions of the debates, in general?” Responses to the second question were recorded literally, and up to three answers were coded for each respondent.
12 Because language is such an important correlate of exposure to the debates, all subsequent analyses will be conducted for a subset of anglophone respondents only, as well as for the complete half-sample.
13 See Mishler, William, Political Participation in Canada (Toronto: Macmillan, 1979),Google Scholar and Burke, Mike, Clarke, Harold, and LeDuc, Lawrence, “Federal and Provincial Political Participation in Canada: Some Methodological and Substantive Considerations,” Canadian Review of Sociology and Anthropology 15 (1979), 61–75.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
14 The Pearson correlations between watching/not watching the debates and the set of activities shown in Table I range from a high of .22 for “discuss politics with others” to a low of .10 for “contact a public official.” There is also a modest relationship between watching/not watching the debates and such variables as political interest and political efficacy. The Pearson correlations were respectively .29 and .16 against standard scales of political interest and political efficacy.
15 This question was asked of the same random half-sample of the 1979 electorate in the sequence dealing with exposure to the campaign. The exact wording was: “How about television? During the election campaign, did you watch programs or advertisements about the parties or candidates or other aspects of the campaign? Would you say that you saw quite a few, some, or almost none?”
16 The Blishen scale was employed here as a summary measure of socioeconomic status, and the correlation (Pearson r) between watching the debates and this scale was . 14. When the Blishen scale was recorded into four categories (HI, MED-HI, MED-LO, and LO), 64 per cent of those in the highest category were found to have watched the debates, compared with 42 per cent in the lowest SES category. Education produces a similar pattern. Among those with post-secondary education, 60 percent watched the debates while only 44 per cent did so in the lowest education group. The correlation (Pearson r) between education and watching the debates is .10. Age produces a weak pattern (Pearson r= .09). Sixty per cent of those over age 45 watched the debates, and there is no significant difference in this respect among various age groupings over 40. However, only 47 per cent of those under age 30 watched the debates. All of these patterns are similar in both strength and direction to relationships between sociodemographic variables and other passive political activity measures.
17 See Jenson, Jane, “Party Loyalty in Canada: The Question of Party Identification,” this JOURNAL 8 (1975), 543–53;Google Scholar and LeDuc, Lawrence, Clarke, Harold, Jenson, Jane, and Pammett, Jon, “Partisan Instability in Canada: Evidence from a New Panel Study,” American Political Science Review 78 (1984), 470–84.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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20 Respondents were presented with a card depicting a “thermometer,” and were asked to indicate their feelings toward each of the parties, leaders, and local candidates on a 100-point scale. The 50º mark is given as the neutral point on the scale. This measure is explained in some detail in Clarke, , et al., Political Choice in Canada, 406–07.Google Scholar
21 Clark ran behind his party among virtually all groups and in all parts of the country, but not so far behind as did his predecessor, Robert Stanfield, in the 1974 election. See Pammett, et al., “The Politics of Limited Change,” 11-19.
22 A more detailed analysis of the thermometer scores for Broadbent in comparison to those for the NDP generally may be found in Pammett, et al., “The Politics of Limited Change,” 11-19.
23 Clarke, Harold, Jenson, Jane, LeDuc, Lawrence, and Pammett, Jon, “Voting Behaviour and the Outcome of the 1979 Federal Election: The Impact of the Leaders and Issues,” this JOURNAL 15 (1982), 517–52.Google Scholar See also Clarke, et al., Absent Mandate.
24 Clarke, et al., Absent Mandate.
25 In 1974,19 per cent of a national sample reported deciding how to vote as late as the last week of the campaign. See the more detailed discussion of “time of vote decision” in Clarke, , et al. Political Choice in Canada, 275–78.Google Scholar
26 Ibid., 343-50.
27 Hagner and Rieselbach, “The Impact of the 1976 Presidential Debates.”
28 Clarke, et al., Polical Choice in Canada. See also Lawrence LeDuc, “Canada: The Politics of Stable Dealignment,” in Dalton, Russell, Flanagan, Scott, and Allen Beck, Paul (eds.), Electoral Change in Industrial Democracies (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1985), 402–23.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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