Hope, Optimism, and Expectations for the Political Future.

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Bibliographic Details
Title: Hope, Optimism, and Expectations for the Political Future.
Authors: Barnfield, Matthew (AUTHOR), Johns, Rob (AUTHOR)
Source: Political Behavior. Mar2026, Vol. 48 Issue 1, p205-228. 24p.
Subjects: Hope, Optimism, Partisanship, Personality, Political participation, Political psychology, Political forecasting
Geographic Terms: United Kingdom
Abstract: Expectations of what the future holds are a significant driver of political behavior. It is therefore important to understand the sources of those expectations. In this paper, we explore the psychological dispositions driving positivity about the political future. We draw on psychologists' distinction between optimism—a dispositional belief that good things will happen, come what may—and hope—a trait of envisioning, pursuing and believing one's goals to be achievable. We assess pre-registered hypotheses about the distinct influences of optimism and hope on valence expectations—beliefs about whether there will be good or bad societal outcomes—and electoral expectations—beliefs about likely election outcomes—in a representative-sample survey experiment in the United Kingdom. We find that optimism drives positive valence expectations, but hope drives partisan electoral expectations. Indeed, partisan bias in electoral expectations is exhibited only by those scoring higher in hope. We show experimentally that positive information from polls and expert commentary dampens this impact of hope by raising the expectations of the otherwise unhopeful. Our findings suggest that so-called 'wishful thinking' about election outcomes might stem from a sense of agency around electoral politics, but that this sense of agency does not extend to how citizens envision society's prospects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Database: Psychology and Behavioral Sciences Collection
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Abstract:Expectations of what the future holds are a significant driver of political behavior. It is therefore important to understand the sources of those expectations. In this paper, we explore the psychological dispositions driving positivity about the political future. We draw on psychologists' distinction between optimism—a dispositional belief that good things will happen, come what may—and hope—a trait of envisioning, pursuing and believing one's goals to be achievable. We assess pre-registered hypotheses about the distinct influences of optimism and hope on valence expectations—beliefs about whether there will be good or bad societal outcomes—and electoral expectations—beliefs about likely election outcomes—in a representative-sample survey experiment in the United Kingdom. We find that optimism drives positive valence expectations, but hope drives partisan electoral expectations. Indeed, partisan bias in electoral expectations is exhibited only by those scoring higher in hope. We show experimentally that positive information from polls and expert commentary dampens this impact of hope by raising the expectations of the otherwise unhopeful. Our findings suggest that so-called 'wishful thinking' about election outcomes might stem from a sense of agency around electoral politics, but that this sense of agency does not extend to how citizens envision society's prospects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
ISSN:01909320
DOI:10.1007/s11109-025-10027-5