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ID180813
Title ProperPlaying to the Gallery
Other Title Informationemotive rhetoric in parliaments
LanguageENG
AuthorOSNABRÜGGE, MORITZ
Summary / Abstract (Note)Research has shown that emotions matter in politics, but we know less about when and why politicians use emotive rhetoric in the legislative arena. This article argues that emotive rhetoric is one of the tools politicians can use strategically to appeal to voters. Consequently, we expect that legislators are more likely to use emotive rhetoric in debates that have a large general audience. Our analysis covers two million parliamentary speeches held in the UK House of Commons and the Irish Parliament. We use a dictionary-based method to measure emotive rhetoric, combining the Affective Norms for English Words dictionary with word-embedding techniques to create a domain-specific dictionary. We show that emotive rhetoric is more pronounced in high-profile legislative debates, such as Prime Minister’s Questions. These findings contribute to the study of legislative speech and political representation by suggesting that emotive rhetoric is used by legislators to appeal directly to voters.
`In' analytical NoteAmerican Political Science Review Vol. 115, No.3; Aug 2021: p.885 - 899
Journal SourceAmerican Political Science Review 2021-09 115, 3