4.2 Article

Partisanship and divided perceptions of the American and British flags

Journal

GROUP PROCESSES & INTERGROUP RELATIONS
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/13684302231200138

Keywords

affect; flag; partisanship; political identity; symbols

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This study found that supporters of the Democratic and Labour parties in the United States and United Kingdom, respectively, associate their national flags with less positive and more negative feelings compared to their Republican and Conservative counterparts. The extent to which people associate their national flags with their political outgroup drives these partisan differences.
National flags embody their nations' core values and beliefs but they may be perceived differently in today's increasingly polarized societies. We conducted two studies (N = 768) in the United States to examine partisan differences between Democrats and Republicans, and a third study in the United Kingdom (N = 509) between supporters of the Labour and Conservative parties. Across all three studies, we consistently found that Democrat and Labour participants (compared to their Republican and Conservative counterparts) associated their respective national flags with less positive and more negative affect and concepts. Studies 2 and 3 further showed that these partisan divides were driven by how much people associated their national flags with their political outgroup. For Democrats and Labour participants, associating their national flags with their political outgroup predicted less positive and more negative affect, but associating the flags with their political ingroup predicted more positive and less negative affect.

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