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Keeping up with the Joneses, at the polls
May/June 2008
by Carole Bass '83, '97MSL
Lots of people say they vote; far fewer actually do. In a study of the
2004 presidential election, 77 percent of voters claimed to vote, but only 60
percent did. Now a pair of political scientists, Alan Gerber and Donald Green,
have hit upon a way to close the gap: threaten to tell the neighbors.
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"Have friends over to your house on election day."
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Gerber and Green experimented with different varieties of social
pressure to get people to the polls. They found that while reminding voters of
their civic duty helped, the most dramatic increases came from publicizing
voting records. Their findings hold great potential for political campaigns in
which turnout can spell the difference between victory and defeat.
Phone banking costs $20 to $30 per vote while traditional direct mail
runs $60 a vote, says Green. Our costs were more like $3 to $4."
Green and Gerber sent mailings to four groups of randomly chosen voters
before the August 2006 Michigan primaries. One mailing urged: DO YOUR CIVIC
DUTY -- VOTE!" A second told voters that researchers were using public records to
study their turnout. The third mailing listed members of the recipient's
household and whether they had voted in recent elections. The fourth blared,
WHAT IF YOUR NEIGHBORS KNEW WHETHER YOU VOTED?" and revealed the voting
records of both household members and neighbors. (The study appeared in the American
Political Science Review in
February.)
Compared with a control group that received no mailings, turnout
increased with the level of pressure exerted. That was no surprise. What
startled the researchers was the degree of success. Green expected the neighbors"
mailing to boost voting by 2.5 percentage points. Instead, turnout leaped more
than 8 points.
Despite the success of the Big Brother approach, Green prefers a
friendlier strategy -- a return to the festive atmosphere of early America, when
voting was a public celebration with bands, booze, and bonfires. (See Findings,
January/February.) Have friends over to your house on election day," Green
suggests. We can drink whiskey and then go cast our ballots. You're changing
the turnout problem from getting people to go to the polls to getting people to
go to a party. And that's an easier problem." 
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