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oapen-20.500.12657-605022024-03-27T14:15:01Z Chapter 8 Persistent Optimism under Political Uncertainty Tenenboim-Weinblatt, Keren Baden, Christian Aharoni, Tali Overbeck, Maximilian Elections; Israel; King Bibi; Netanyahu; populism; democracy thema EDItEUR::G Reference, Information and Interdisciplinary subjects::GT Interdisciplinary studies::GTM Regional / International studies This chapter examines the social dynamics of projections about the outcomes and implications of the repeated elections in Israel. Based on a combination of a panel survey and focus groups, we analyze citizens’ evolving predictions regarding the expected largest party, the next prime minister, the coalition composition, and the future of Israel more generally. Introducing a conceptual framework that breaks political projections into several constituent elements, we study what probabilities and evaluations people assign to their predictions, how they explain them, and what their implications are for political participation. We show that despite the deepening political crisis, Israeli citizens’ political optimism did not decrease during the three 2019–2020 election campaigns. Furthermore, we find an important link between intention to vote and the expected level of happiness about the predicted outcomes. Based on these findings, we argue that persistent optimism is one explanation for the higher voter turnout in each round of elections. In the epilogue we consider additional insights from the 2021 election, which saw a reversal in voters’ growing optimism and turnout, but which eventually fulfilled hopes of the anti-Netanyahu camp for political change. 2023-01-04T14:27:05Z 2023-01-04T14:27:05Z 2022 chapter 9781032213392 9781032213408 https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/60502 eng application/pdf Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International 9781003267911_10.4324_9781003267911-11.pdf Taylor & Francis The Elections in Israel, 2019–2021 Routledge 10.4324/ 9781003267911-11 10.4324/ 9781003267911-11 7b3c7b10-5b1e-40b3-860e-c6dd5197f0bb 072fc7d5-09c8-45ad-a93b-e21b86bae97b 6a044850-f30f-4ed8-a4a5-8b5b4c45af59 9781032213392 9781032213408 European Research Council (ERC) Routledge 28 802990 PROFECI European Research Council (ERC) open access
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English
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This chapter examines the social dynamics of projections about the outcomes and implications of the repeated elections in Israel. Based on a combination of a panel survey and focus groups, we analyze citizens’ evolving predictions regarding the expected largest party, the next prime minister, the coalition composition, and the future of Israel more generally. Introducing a conceptual framework that breaks political projections into several constituent elements, we study what probabilities and evaluations people assign to their predictions, how they explain them, and what their implications are for political participation. We show that despite the deepening political crisis, Israeli citizens’ political optimism did not decrease during the three 2019–2020 election campaigns. Furthermore, we find an important link between intention to vote and the expected level of happiness about the predicted outcomes. Based on these findings, we argue that persistent optimism is one explanation for the higher voter turnout in each round of elections. In the epilogue we consider additional insights from the 2021 election, which saw a reversal in voters’ growing optimism and turnout, but which eventually fulfilled hopes of the anti-Netanyahu camp for political change.
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9781003267911_10.4324_9781003267911-11.pdf
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9781003267911_10.4324_9781003267911-11.pdf
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Taylor & Francis
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2023
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1799945212847456256
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