Volume 45, Issue 2
FEATURES

Polls and Elections: Do the Presidential Primary Debates Matter? Measuring Candidate Speaking Time and Audience Response during the 2012 Primaries

Patrick A. Stewart

University of Arkansas—Fayetteville

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First published: 25 April 2015
Citations: 6

AUTHOR'S NOTE: I would like to thank Tung Do for his research assistance

Abstract

Televised presidential primary debates are highly important for partisans by providing unmediated information concerning candidate viability. Here the presumptive winner of a given primary may be indicated during debates through both the speaking time they are given and the audience response they elicit. Here I explore both candidate speaking time and audience laughter and applause by content, analyzing six 2012 Republican Party primary debates. Debate venue plays a significant role in determining applause and, to a lesser extent, laughter. There is also a negative relationship between candidate speaking time and audience laughter, suggesting an insurgent strategy for second‐tier candidates. © 2014 Center for the Study of the Presidency and Congress

Number of times cited according to CrossRef: 6

  • Visual Priming and Framing During the 2020 Democratic Presidential Debates: Electoral Status Predicts Favorable Camera Treatment, The International Journal of Press/Politics, 10.1177/1940161220952736, (194016122095273), (2020).
  • Visual priming and framing of the 2016 GOP and Democratic Party presidential primary debates, Politics and the Life Sciences, 10.1017/pls.2018.16, 38, 1, (14-31), (2019).
  • Candidate Performance and Observable Audience Response: Laughter and Applause–Cheering During the First 2016 Clinton–Trump Presidential Debate, Frontiers in Psychology, 10.3389/fpsyg.2018.01182, 9, (2018).
  • Debates and Partisan Enthusiasm Before the 2012 Republican Primaries, Presidential Studies Quarterly, 10.1111/psq.12369, 47, 2, (293-310), (2017).
  • “Please Clap”: Applause, Laughter, and Booing during the 2016 GOP Presidential Primary Debates, PS: Political Science & Politics, 10.1017/S1049096516001451, 49, 04, (696-700), (2016).
  • Audience responses and the context of political speeches, Journal of Social and Political Psychology, 10.5964/jspp.v4i2.618, 4, 2, (601-622), (2016).

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