Rally Effect in the Covid-19 Pandemic: The Role of Affectedness, Fear, and Partisanship

Melanie Dietz, Sigrid Roßteutscher, Philipp Scherer & Lars-Christopher Stövsand  | 2021

When the Covid-19 pandemic hit internationally in March 2020, governments and political incumbents received exceptionally high approval ratings. Such a sudden spike of public support in times of crisis is often explained as the ‘rally ‘round the flag’ effect. This paper has three goals: first, to examine whether a rally effect indeed occurred; second, to analyse whether and how much it is related to (i) affectedness, i.e. the occurrence of infections on individual and aggregate level, and (ii) fear of Covid-19; and third, to examine an assumed moderating effect of partisanship. We merged individual survey data from an online survey conducted in September 2020 as part of the German Longitudinal Election Study (GLES) with infection rates on the state level (Bundesländer) published by the Robert Koch Institute. We detect a striking rally effect in all partisan camps. Furthermore, we identify fear of Covid-19 as the driving mechanism while there is no evidence that affectedness is a major force behind the rally effect. Furthermore, we show that partisanship takes on a moderating role for fear of Covid-19 regarding satisfaction with government.

Date
26.12.2021
Language
English
Publication Type
Journal article
Audience

Work Packages

FRA_F_02
RISC Frankfurt am Main
Value Conflict, Labour Division, and Social Cohesion from a Gender Perspective
» Project description
FRA_F_04
RISC Frankfurt am Main
Political Conflict Regulation and Social Cohesion
» Project description
» back to publication overview