Research & Politics (Aug 2019)

Counting the Pinocchios: The effect of summary fact-checking data on perceived accuracy and favorability of politicians

  • Alexander Agadjanian,
  • Nikita Bakhru,
  • Victoria Chi,
  • Devyn Greenberg,
  • Byrne Hollander,
  • Alexander Hurt,
  • Joseph Kind,
  • Ray Lu,
  • Annie Ma,
  • Brendan Nyhan,
  • Daniel Pham,
  • Michael Qian,
  • Mackinley Tan,
  • Clara Wang,
  • Alexander Wasdahl,
  • Alexandra Woodruff

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/2053168019870351
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6

Abstract

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Can the media effectively hold politicians accountable for making false claims? Journalistic fact-checking assesses the accuracy of individual public statements by public officials, but less is known about whether this process effectively imposes reputational costs on misinformation-prone politicians who repeatedly make false claims. This study therefore explores the effects of exposure to summaries of fact-check ratings, a new format that presents a more comprehensive assessment of politician statement accuracy over time. Across three survey experiments, we compared the effects of negative individual statement ratings and summary fact-checking data on favorability and perceived statement accuracy of two prominent elected officials. As predicted, summary fact-checking had a greater effect on politician perceptions than individual fact-checking. Notably, we did not observe the expected pattern of motivated reasoning: co-partisans were not consistently more resistant than supporters of the opposition party. Our findings suggest that summary fact-checking is particularly effective at holding politicians accountable for misstatements.