Archive for the ‘Liberals’ Category

Liberals are more emotion-driven than conservatives

Emotions are powerful motivators of human behavior and attitudes. Emotions also play an important role in guiding policy support in conflict and other political contexts. Researchers at Tel Aviv University and the Interdisciplinary Center in Herzliya have studied the interaction between emotion and political ideology, showing that the motivating power of emotions is not the same for those on different ends of the ideological spectrum. Their research is published in Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin.

Design of the study

The researchers conducted six studies to examine emotions, ideology, and how they act together to affect support for policies. The first two studies focused on intergroup empathy, while the third study examined the interactive influence of ideology and despair on support for policies. Participants self-identified as being at different points of the right-left ideological spectrum.

Specific scenarios were selected for the six studies relating to current events in Israel, mainly surrounding the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and possible steps towards its resolution. Lead researcher Ruthie Pliskin elaborates on why the specific scenarios were chosen; "We selected our different scenarios with the aim of tackling both positive and negative developments in intergroup conflicts, eliciting a range of different emotions towards the out-group and the situation, referring to different types of out-groups, and among different in-groups. Furthermore, we wanted to utilize both contrived, controlled scenarios, and major real-world developments, reflecting real and possible political developments."

Studies 4 through 6 were designed to alleviate some of the limitations in the first three studies. Study 4 utilized a correlational design addressing real-life developments--renewed peace negotiations--and a representative sample of Jewish Israelis. Study 4 allowed the researchers to examine whether the effect in the first three studies could be replicated in a real-world scenario, and also generalized to anger--a negative intergroup emotion brought on by the perception of another group's actions as unjust, and associated with a desire to confront or attack the anger-evoking group.

Study 5 followed a similar design as Study 4 and was conducted during wartime. The study controlled for various measures of attitude strength and group identification, ruling out the possibility that the previous findings simply reflect right-left differences in attitude strength rather than in the rigidity with which they hold a specific attitude. Study 6 went a step further and examined a novel population--Palestinian citizens of Israel--to eliminate the possibility that the findings are population-dependent, and expanded the examination to include fear--an emotion often related to rightist ideology.

Results of the study

In line with previous scientific knowledge on the relative rigidity of rightist ideological beliefs, the first three studies illustrate that induced emotions have a greater influence on leftists' positions than on rightists' positions, even though the experimental manipulations affected levels of emotion similarly for all participants. Even the third study, in which a negative emotion was induced, led to changes in policy support only among leftists, as was the case with empathy in the first two studies. Induced empathy toward both Palestinians (study 1) and asylum-seekers (study 2) led to increased support for conciliatory and humanitarian policies among leftists, whereas induced despair (study 3) decreased support for conciliatory policies only among leftists.

Studies 4 through 6 looked at real-world scenarios, and found that Jewish-Israeli leftists' policy support was more related to both empathy and anger than rightists', at times of both peace efforts (study 4) and war (study 5). The final study found the same pattern of results with regard to fear among a different population, demonstrating that the interactive effect of ideology and emotion on policy support is not limited to a given population nor to emotions typically associated with leftist ideology.

Ms. Pliskin and her colleagues believe that these results may apply to other cultures, including liberals and conservatives in the U.S. "We would expect to find similar results among rightists and leftists in other cultures, including conservatives and liberals in the U.S., because of the cross-cultural similarities in the superstructure of ideology and the needs associated with rightist versus leftist ideology--and because of how these factors relate to emotional processes and their outcomes." But Ms. Pliskin does caution that more research would need to be done to determine if there are cultural factors that may limit or increase observed left-right differences.

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Liberals are more emotion-driven than conservatives

GOP Mailer Intimidates & Threatens Voters By Outing Liberals – Video


GOP Mailer Intimidates Threatens Voters By Outing Liberals
"The GOP is trying to convince Iowa voters on Facebook that their neighbors will know if they voted Republican. Screenshots of Facebook ads, promoted by the official Facebook page of the Republica...

By: The Young Turks

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GOP Mailer Intimidates & Threatens Voters By Outing Liberals - Video

Liberals remain silent on GO transit expansion to Stratford – Video


Liberals remain silent on GO transit expansion to Stratford

By: Randy Pettapiece, MPP

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Liberals remain silent on GO transit expansion to Stratford - Video

SA Libs call for fracking inquiry

South Australia's Liberal opposition is putting investment at risk by calling an inquiry into fracking, oil and gas producer Santos says.

The Liberals will move next week to establish a parliamentary select committee to examine the effects of fracking in the state's south east, saying it will ease concerns about the practice.

But the state Labor government and industry groups have rubbished the proposed inquiry, saying it would put billions of dollars of investment at risk.

Santos' vice-president of Eastern Australia, James Baulderstone, added to the criticism, saying the Liberals were ignoring the company's long track record of safe operations in SA.

"The South Australian gas industry has been built on strong bipartisan political support, which in turn has given investors confidence to invest in this state," he said in a statement on Friday.

"If this inquiry is captured by political opportunists, it could seriously erode that confidence."

While Santos has no direct operations in the south east, the company was concerned at the "wider implications" of the proposed inquiry, Mr Baulderstone said.

The SA Chamber of Mines and Energy said the business community should be alarmed that the Liberals were playing into the hands of "hardcore Green activists".

The Liberals rejected an earlier fracking inquiry proposed by the Greens, saying it was too broad.

Opposition resources spokesman Dan van Holst Pellekaan told AAP the Liberals' inquiry would clear up scaremongering by the environmental lobby.

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SA Libs call for fracking inquiry

NDP 'disappointed' Liberals went public with allegations

NDP Leader Tom Mulcair says he knew of the misconduct allegations being levelled by two of his MPs against two now-former Liberal Members of Parliament, but he did not go public with the complaints to respect their wishes.

Mulcair said his primary concern was to ensure that the two NDP MPs who were making the accusations got whatever help they needed, and that their wishes were respected.

"Those wishes included a very strong desire to keep this confidential. This was their request and we were not about to override that and make them victims a second time."

The NDP received no prior warning whatsoever from the Liberals that they would go public with the allegations, Mulcair told reporters Thursday that an event in Whitby, Ont.

On Wednesday, Liberals Massimo Pacetti of Montreal and Scott Andrews of Newfoundland were suspended from the Liberal caucus after allegations of what party leader Justin Trudeau called "serious personal misconduct."

Both Pacetti and Andrews deny any wrongdoing.

Trudeau asked the Commons speaker to investigate, saying the days when such incidents were dealt with quietly in Parliament's backrooms are long gone.

Trudeau said he had a duty to act when he was approached with the allegations.

I just know that for someone to come forward to a party leader that is not their own, there is an expectation that there will be consequences, Trudeau told reporters Thursday.

One of the NDP MPs approached Trudeau with allegations of inappropriate behaviour by Pacetti and Andrews on a five-hour bus trip back to Ottawa from Cpl. Nathan Cirillos funeral in Hamilton, Ont., last Tuesday.

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NDP 'disappointed' Liberals went public with allegations