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March 27, 2025

Partisan divide in perceptions of Ford-Kavanaugh hearings revealed

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Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain

A newly-published study in the journal Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin provides insight into how Democrats and Republicans viewed the 2018 Senate hearings on sexual assault allegations against then-Supreme Court nominee Judge Brett M. Kavanaugh.

Kavanaugh and his accuser, Christine Blasey Ford, a professor of psychology at Palo Alto University, faced off several years ago with testimony that riveted the nation. Following the fiery testimony, Kavanugh was elevated to Justice of the Supreme Court.

In ," UC Irvine researchers found that:

The study analyzed open-ended responses from a national sample of more than 2,300 U.S. adults collected in the days following the hearings. Using topic modeling, the researchers identified 13 distinct topics that emerged in participants' written responses.

"The hearings provided a unique, real-time opportunity to examine how Americans across the political divide responded to the same content at the same time. In fact, on average participants reported being exposed to almost eight hours of news coverage of the hearings per day from a combination of media sources, and yet they 'saw' a very different hearing," note the study's authors Roxane Cohen Silver, distinguished professor of psychological science, medicine and public health; Emma L. Grisham ('22 UC Irvine Ph.D. psychological science), postdoctoral associate at Duke University; Pasha Dashtgard ('22 UC Irvine Ph.D. psychological science), research director at American University's Polarization and Extremism Research Innovation Lab; Daniel P. Relihan, UC Irvine postdoctoral scholar; and E. Alison Holman, UC Irvine professor of nursing and .

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"This partisan divide in both perceptions and stress levels highlights the depth of political polarization in the U.S.," they say.

The researchers point out that understanding divergent partisan narratives is crucial for addressing political divisions and finding common ground on contentious issues.

Their findings contribute to understanding how partisanship shapes and emotional responses to political events, and suggest the need for further research on:

The study's broader impacts include helping inform efforts to combat political polarization, leading to interventions designed to address psychological maladjustments following politicized events.

"During a period of political polarization that has only intensified in the years since the confirmation of Justice Kavanaugh, our results make clear the importance of understanding partisan differences in perception and their potential consequences for mental health and political discourse," Silver says.

"Our findings also highlight how political partisanship and other social identities shape how individuals process and respond to information about their social environments, particularly what they see in the media."

More information: Emma L. Grisham et al, They Saw a Hearing: Democrats' and Republicans' Perceptions of and Responses to the Ford-Kavanaugh Hearings, Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin (2023).

Journal information: Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin

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The study highlights a partisan divide in perceptions of the 2018 Ford-Kavanaugh hearings. Democrats and Republicans focused on different aspects of the hearings, aligning with their party's views. Republicans questioned the credibility of Ford's allegations, while Democrats emphasized Kavanaugh's emotional testimony. Republicans reported lower stress levels than Democrats. The findings underscore the role of partisanship in shaping perceptions and stress responses, emphasizing the need to address political polarization and its impact on mental health and discourse.

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.