There is growing concern about the impact of declining political trust on democracies. Psychological researc has introduced the concept of epistemic (mis)trust as a stable disposition acquired through development which may influence our sociopolitical engagement. Given trust's prominence in current politics, w examined the relationship between epistemic trust and people's choices of (un)trustworthy political leaders In two representative samples in the UK and US (N = 1096), we tested whether epistemic trust predict political leader choices through three political dimensions: dogmatism, political trust, and ideology. Althoug epistemic trust did not directly predict choices of political leaders, it predicted dogmatism and politica ideology, which in turn predicted choices of political leaders. A network analysis revealed that epistemic trus and political dimensions only interact through their common connection with dogmatism. These finding suggest that cognitive and affective development may underlie an individual's political ideology an associated beliefs.
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8 April 2025
A leader I can(not) trust: understanding the path from epistemic trust to political leader choices via dogmatism
Mariana von Mohr,
Kobi Hackenburg,
Michal Tanzer,
Aikaterini Fotopoulou,
Chloe Campbell,
Manos Tsakiris
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Politics and the Life Sciences
Vol. 44 • No. 1
Spring 2025
Vol. 44 • No. 1
Spring 2025
authoritarian leader
dogmatism
epistemic trust
political ideology
political trust