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Domestic Politics of International Compromise Ryan Brutger⇤ October 14, 2016 Abstract: In an era of increasingly public diplomacy, conventional wisdom assumes that leaders who compromise lose the respect of their constituents and damage their reputations, which undermines the prospects for peace and cooperation. This is the first paper to challenge this assumption and test how leaders can negotiate compromises and avoid paying domestic costs. Drawing on theories of psychology, leadership, and partisanship, I argue that leaders reduce or eliminate domestic public constraints by exercising “proposal power” and initiating compromises. Employing survey experiments to test how public approval responds to leaders’ strategies across security and economic issues, I find approval for compromise is conditioned by the partisanship of the audience and the president, with Republican leaders having greater leeway to negotiate compromises and audiences of Democrats being more supportive of compromise. These contributions suggest that leaders who exercise proposal power have significant flexibility to negotiate compromise settlements in international bargaining. Acknowledgements: I would like to thank Omar Bashir, Thomas Christensen, Christina Davis, In Song Kim, Yonatan Lupu, Helen Milner, Julia Morse, Tyler Pratt, Thomas Scherer, Kristopher Ramsay, Elizabeth Saunders, Jacob Shapiro, Yuki Shiraito, Jessica Weeks and participants of Princeton’s graduate research seminar for valuable feedback on earlier drafts of this project. I also thank Princeton’s Center for International Security Studies, the Fund for Experimental Social Sciences, the Neihaus Center for Globalization and Governance, and the Mamdouha S. Bobst Center for Peace and Justice for their financial support. ⇤ Assistant Professor, University of Pennsylvania, Department of Political Science, Email: [email protected]. Web: http://web.sas.upenn.edu/brutger/. Introduction Hans Morgenthau (1948, 433) famously wrote that “No man who has taken such a stand before the attentive eyes and ears of the world can in full public view agree to a compromise without looking like a fool and a knave.” Yet even as he noted the risks of public compromise in the age of “new” diplomacy, Morgenthau recognized compromise as essential to the maintenance of peace and order in international relations.1 Almost seventy years after the publication of Politics Among Nations, scholars continue to fear the e↵ects of public compromises. Indeed scholars have written extensively on the costs of inconsistent rhetoric and e↵ects of changing policies on public opinion (Fearon, 1994; Hummel, 2010; Kertzer and Brutger, 2016; Levy et al., 2015; Poole, 2007; Tomz and Houweling, 2012). Although research shows that leaders are generally punished for acting inconsistently, existing work has failed to examine how public opinion reacts to compromises and its consequences for international negotiations. Since theories of political positioning (Hummel, 2010), diplomacy (Morgenthau, 1948; Yarhi-Milo, 2013), and international bargaining (Fearon, 1994; Guisinger and Smith, 2002; Tarar and Leventouglu, 2013) rely on assumptions about how domestic public opinion responds to leaders’ strategies, it is time to directly examine how compromise a↵ects public opinion. The idea that compromise and inconsistency generate domestic political costs is most prominently integrated into IR theory by Fearon’s (1994) seminal work on domestic audience costs. Since Fearon wrote that backing down from threats generates domestic costs due to concerns about “credibility, face, and honor” (Fearon, 1994, 581), domestic audience costs have become common place in crisis bargaining models (Haynes, 2012; Kurizaki, 2007; Tarar and Leventouglu, 2009). However, theories invoking domestic concerns about reputation and public opinion extend far beyond audience costs (Chapman and Reiter, 2004; Cohen, 1995; Herrmann, Tetlock, and Visser, 1999; Jentleson and Britton, 1998). Yet even as the influence of domestic public opinion on foreign policy has received significant attention, no study has systematically examined whether public opinion responds to compromises in a manner that supports scholars’ extreme aversion to public compromises. Rather than assuming that the public opposes compromise, this paper systematically examines public attitudes toward compromise, focusing on three contributions. First, I argue that compromise – where a state or leader agrees to concessions that are less than they previously threatened not to 1 See the “Four Prerequisites of Compromise” outlined in Morgenthau’s rules of diplomacy (Morgenthau, 1948, 441). 1 accept, but are short of backing down entirely – is viewed as a distinct political strategy that generates greater domestic support than other forms of political inconsistency. I find that compromise does not systematically generate disapproval among domestic audiences. Using causal mediation analysis, I further probe the foundations of support for compromise, finding that audiences believe leaders preserve their reputations when negotiating compromises. Second, building from psychological and management theories of leadership, I introduce an original theory of “proposal power,” whereby leaders who are perceived as initiating compromises, as opposed to accepting them, garner greater public support. Proposal power allows leaders to frame the perception of negotiated settlements, such that leaders can avoid domestic punishment for baking down from threats and promises. Lastly, I show that perceptions of compromise and proposal power are significantly influenced by partisan politics. Rather than politics stopping at the water’s edge, partisanship plays a critical role in shaping how audiences react to foreign policy compromises and conditions the diplomatic incentives leaders face at home. These contributions show that leaders have significant flexibility to negotiate compromise settlements on the international stage and, contrary to the prevailing wisdom, public compromises do not jeopardize the respect of the public or the leader’s reputation. Moving away from the assumption that audiences uniformly punish compromise is not just a theoretical endeavor, but is important for capturing many real-world bargaining environments. On the domestic stage, the importance of compromise was highlighted as the “fiscal cli↵” approached in 2012. Although many politicians had made ultimatums regarding spending cuts and tax increases, a Gallup poll found that “Sixty-two percent of Americans would like to see federal government leaders compromise on an agreement... more than twice the 25% who want leaders to stick to their principles...” (Jones, 2012). On the international stage, President George W. Bush in the Six-Party Talks negotiated what was described as a “wise compromise” with the North Koreans, even after insisting “on complete, irreversible, and short-term disarmament as the only acceptable approach,” which was not achieved in the negotiations (Bernard, 2007). More recently, this type of bargaining scenario played out in the Syrian crisis, where President Obama made a public threat to the Syrian leadership in 2012, but later chose to back down from that threat and instead accept a compromise. The president’s threat was broadly publicized by major media outlets as a threat to use military force, with the New York Times publishing the headline “Obama Threatens Force Against Syria” (Landler, 2012) and the Wall Street Journal writing “President Threatens Military Response Against Any Use of the Banned Arms” (Entous and Lee, 2012). Yet even after the administration reported 2 “definitive proof” that the Syrian regime had used chemical weapons (Entous, 2013), President Obama was quick to embrace the idea of a compromise that avoided following through on his threat of force (Borger and Roberts, 2013). Instead of following through on a military option, the president supported Russia’s proposal to place Syria’s chemical weapons under international control.2 Compromises such as President Obama’s in the Syrian crisis, President Bush’s in the Six-Party Talks, and those on the domestic stage are not uncommon and thus deserve our attention when evaluating the constraints under which leaders negotiate Diplomacy, Compromise, and Public Opinion Whether negotiating a trade agreement or contemplating military action, leaders often have an incentive to push for a bigger piece of the pie. This means leaders will claim to have high demands or initiate threats that misrepresent their true reservation price in negotiations in an e↵ort to gain a better outcome. While asking for more may be a sound bargaining strategy in some situations, it can also build expectations among domestic constituents that may make it harder for leaders to back down from their demands or threats and instead accept compromises. This is why scholars of both international relations (Fearon, 1994; Morgenthau, 1948) and American politics (Hummel, 2010) argue that leaders pay a domestic cost for backing away from their stated positions. This should be especially true in the age of modern diplomacy, where the media provides the public greater access to information about their leader’s diplomatic positions (Potter and Baum, 2010, 2014; Slantchev, 2006), thus subjecting diplomacy to the “vice of publicity” (Morgenthau, 1948, 431). Scholarship on international negotiations and bargaining perpetuates the longstanding idea that leaders jeopardize their domestic standing and face public ridicule if they back down from their bargaining positions under the watchful eye of domestic publics (Morgenthau, 1948). The most prominent theory of foreign policy accountability is audience costs theory, but recent research has moved beyond traditional audience costs theory and shown that domestic publics hold their leaders accountable not only for threats, but also public promises on the international stage (Levy et al., 2015). From these theories, the IR literature generally assumes that once leaders publicly take a 2 The compromise agreement regarding chemical weapons was inspired by a comment from Secretary of State, John Kerry, which was “not intended to be a diplomatic opening.” However, before Kerry’s return flight to Washington had even landed, Russia had officially proposed a settlement where Syria would relinquish control of its chemical weapons (Gearan, DeYoung, and Englund, 2013). 3 stand, they will pay a domestic cost in the form of lower public approval or lost votes, for any form of inconsistency, such as agreeing to a compromise where they fail to follow through on their original threat or promise. The implications of domestic public opinion costs for international diplomacy and bargaining are two-fold. First, as Morgenthau (1948) pointed out, international diplomacy requires compromise and subjecting international negotiations to the whim of public opinion jeopardizes international peace and security by undermining the potential for compromise. The importance of compromise for peace and security is emphasized by Huth (1988) and Leng (1993) who find that reciprocating firm-butflexible strategies, where leaders pursue diplomatic compromises, are the most e↵ective bargaining strategies for deterrence and avoiding war. Pursuing a compromising strategy can also provide the necessary time to break a diplomatic stalemate (Huth, 1988, 13) and may be viewed as an act of restraint, which could lead to a downward spiral of the conflict and a more peaceful outcome (Kydd, 1997, 387) For such compromise strategies to succeed, leaders must have the capacity to give ground in negotiations, and thus leaders need to believe they can make concessions and compromises without fear of their domestic constituents retaliating against them. Second, domestic constraints can serve a useful role in international bargaining by signaling information and acting as a credible signal of leaders’ resolve (Chapman, Urpelainen, and Wolford, 2013; Fearon, 1994; Mo, 1995). Yet even though they can enhance bargaining leverage at times, domestic constraints can also reduce the potential win-set of agreements, which can undermine international cooperation and prospects for peace.3 Reconsidering Theories of Compromise To understand why and how audiences react to their leaders’ bargaining strategies, I first revisit the most prominent explanations for why audiences punish leaders who act inconsistently on the international stage and then, building upon insights from psychology, management studies, and theories of partisanship, develop a new foundation from which to understand public opinion of compromise. Prominent explanations of why audiences punish leaders for inconsistency invoke concerns about 3 Stasavage (2004) and Fingleton and Raith (2001) each show that public negotiations can results in incentives and constraints that reduce the likelihood of agreement. 4 the leader’s or the country’s reputation (Brutger and Kertzer, 2015; Fearon, 1994; Guisinger and Smith, 2002; Levy et al., 2015) or the leader’s competence (Gelpi and Grieco, 2015; Smith, 1998). As Tomz notes, audiences “believe that hollow threats and promises undermine the country’s reputation; that empty commitments are dishonorable and embarrassing; or that inconsistency is evidence of incompetence” (Tomz, 2007). While these mechanisms may condition approval for leaders who back down from threats and do nothing, I argue that compromise is viewed in a distinct manner, such that these beliefs are tempered, or completely absent, when leaders choose not to follow through on a threat or promise and instead negotiate a settlement, especially when the leader proposes the settlement. In contrast to IR’s general aversion to compromise strategies, scholars of psychology and management studies find that concessions and compromise yield positive outcomes in terms of how audiences feel about negotiations and their perception of the negotiator. While IR scholars argue that signaling resolve is important in bargaining (McManus, 2014), management scholars have found that not o↵ering concessions “can create the impression that a focal negotiator does not act ‘in good faith,’ which in turn can result in deadlock...” (Hu↵meier and Freund, 2014). In their study of bargaining perceptions and behavior, Benton, Kelley, and Liebling (1972) found that subjects who observed a negotiator o↵er concessions were more likely to believe the negotiator was “fair” and the outcomes were more satisfying than when the negotiator stayed firm. Furthermore, they found that when the negotiator made a high demand and stuck to it, respondents believed the negotiator was “unfair” and “bad,” although they were also more likely to say the negotiator was “strong.” These studies support the theory that compromise can generate public support and is viewed di↵erently than other forms of political inconsistency. Although psychology and management studies find that leaders who compromise are viewed as fair, it is important to ask whether we should expect that perceptions of fairness will result in heightened support for leaders in international negotiations. A burgeoning literature shows that individuals’ values and perceptions of fairness do play an important role in shaping public opinion of foreign policy (Brewer et al., 2004; Gottfried and Trager, 2016; Kertzer et al., 2014; Rathbun et al., 2016). Scholars have demonstrated that one of the most important set of values for predicting attitudes toward foreign policy is self-transcendence values – those associated with fairness and caring for others – which strongly predict cooperative internationalism (Rathbun et al., 2016). Examining historical negotiations, Kertzer and Rathbun (2015) show that individuals’ concerns for fairness and 5 prosocial behavior played an important role in shaping bargaining behavior in the Anglo-French and Franco-German negotiations after the First World War. These studies demonstrate that concerns for fairness play a significant role in shaping foreign policy attitudes and suggest that those who value fairness are likely to support leaders who negotiate international compromises. Furthermore, the finding that publics respond favorably to compromise and concessions is consistent with theories of graduated reciprocation in tension-reduction models (Osgood, 1962), which have also shown that backing away from demands makes agreement more likely in negotiations (Benton, Kelley, and Liebling, 1972). Concessions and compromise thus play a vital role in the resolution of disputes and leaders who embrace these strategies are more likely to be viewed as fair and their audiences are more likely to be satisfied with the negotiated outcome. Rather than jeopardizing the leader’s reputation, backing down from demands and reaching a compromise can generate positive approval from audiences and increased satisfaction with the bargaining outcome. This suggests that compromise is viewed in a substantively di↵erent manner than other forms of political inconsistency, and leaders who compromise should garner greater support than those who engage in other forms of inconsistency. Hypothesis 1: Ceteris paribus, leaders who back down from threats and reach compromises will have higher approval than those who back down and choose not to engage. Proposal Power There is a potential trade-o↵ that leaders face when backing down from threats or ultimatums and reaching compromises. Leaders who make concessions are less likely to be viewed as strong, even though they are more likely to be viewed as fair and good leaders (Benton, Kelley, and Liebling, 1972). Given that international relations is argued to be dictated by power, or perceptions of power, leaders ought to take steps to preserve their reputations for strength. I argue that leaders can exercise proposal power to enhance audience perceptions of their leadership strength and bolster support for negotiated compromises. Proposal power – the framing of a negotiated settlement such that the leader is viewed as initiating the agreement, as opposed to accepting it – shapes audiences’ perceptions of leaders’ handling of negotiations in two ways. First, it enhances the public’s perception of the negotiator’s leadership qualities. According to leadership theories, leadership requires initiative, coordination, 6 and direction (Bass, 1990). When leaders take initiative, audiences and followers tend to give them higher ratings (Van Vugt, 2006). Experimental studies of leadership have found that those who take initiative are more likely to be nominated as leaders in the future (Kremer and Mack, 2013), suggesting that voters are more likely to support and re-elect politicians who take the initiative and propose agreements. These theories of leadership suggest that when audiences view politicians taking the initiative, as is the case when they exercise proposal power, the leader fulfills the audience’s expectation for what a leader ought to do, which builds the perception of the politician as an e↵ective and strong leader. Consistent with theories of leadership, proposal power allows politicians to preserve their reputations and maintain support among domestic audiences. Proposal power also influences public opinion by providing a reference cue to the domestic audience about the negotiation. Given that the public is often poorly informed when it comes to foreign policy (Holsti, 1996), audiences are likely to turn to their political leaders and respected elites for cues that shape their foreign policy opinions (Berinsky, 2007; Saunders, 2015). In the context of international negotiations, audiences look for in-group elites from whom to take cues – one of the most salient elite cues may come from being in the national in-group. Since in-group favoritism and out-group-anxiety play an important role in shaping foreign policy attitudes (Mansfield and Mutz, 2009; Mutz and Kim, 2016), the domestic leader proposing an agreement provides a strong cue that the leader of the national in-group endorses the agreement. Based on the leader’s proposal power, the public is more likely to infer the agreement is in their interest and allay fears that the agreement is being pushed by the foreign out-group. When evaluating negotiated settlements, audiences will focus on whether a compromise is proposed by the leader of their country, since international negotiations inevitably involve an “us” versus “them” divide, and be more likely to support compromises proposed by their country’s leader. Hypothesis 2: Leaders who propose compromises will have greater approval than those who accept foreign leaders’ compromise proposals. Partisanship While psychology, leadership, and management studies give us reason to believe that compromise strategies can generate broad support from the public, in the political realm we should expect partisanship to play an important role in shaping how audiences respond to compromise. Similar 7 to proposal power, partisanship is a salient reference point for domestic audiences that allows them to seek out cues from like-minded elites (Berinsky, 2007; Cohen, 2003; Nicholson, 2012). Much like proposal power can provide a salient cue to audiences, partisanship provides an even more specific cue about the negotiation. If the leader who initiates the proposal is a member of a constituent’s party, then the compromise is proposed by a leader who is both a member of their party and their country, making them the most likely audience to support the compromise settlement. Given these overlapping reference groups for cues, audiences are more likely to support compromises when their country’s leader proposes the settlement, and even more so when the proposer is a member of their own party. Hypothesis 3: Audiences will have greater approval for leaders of their own political party who reach compromises, as opposed to those from opposing parties. Partisanship identification also acts as a salient sorting mechanism in domestic politics. Recent scholarship suggests that partisan identification reflects deeper individual traits that are likely to a↵ect how people view the world and react to foreign policy (Jost et al., 2003, 2007; Jost, Nosek, and Gosling, 2008). In the United States, liberals are more likely to identify as Democrats and conservatives are more likely to be Republicans. A growing literature on the psychological foundations of political ideology finds that across countries conservatives are more resistant to change, oppose ambiguity, and prefer definitive outcomes that provide closure (Jost et al., 2003, 2007; Jost, Federico, and Napier, 2009; Zavala, Cislak, and Wesolowska, 2010). This suggests that conservatives, who are more likely to resist change and oppose ambiguity, should be the most likely to disapprove of leaders who change their minds or shift strategies. Additionally, conservatives are likely to view the world as more threatening, and are thus more likely to prefer aggressive responses, such as military action (Jost, Federico, and Napier, 2009; Zavala, Cislak, and Wesolowska, 2010). Each of these traits should lead Republicans to be more skeptical of compromises in international negotiations than Democrats. In contrast, liberals are more likely to be accepting of uncertainty (Jost, Federico, and Napier, 2009), and to be accommodationist and support cooperative internationalism (Holsti and Rosenau, 1993, 1996). Sorting of liberals and conservatives based on these traits occurs in the U.S., where Democrats are found to be more dovish than Republicans (Herrmann, Tetlock, and Visser, 1999; Petrocik, 1980; Zavala, Cislak, and Wesolowska, 2010), which suggests that Democrats should have more favorable views of compromise than Republicans. 8 Hypothesis 4: Democrats will have higher approval for compromise than Republicans. Experimental Methods To analyze how audiences respond to leaders’ strategies in international negotiations, I analyze a series of four experiments. The first three build on previous experiments that use the classic “repel an invader” scenario, while the fourth experiment employs an economic scenario, testing whether the theories put forth have support across issue areas. Experimental studies are particularly well suited to isolate changes in public approval in negotiation scenarios, given that they allow the researcher to hold the context constant across a range of strategies and outcomes, ensuring internal validity of the study. Recent experiments have found domestic public opinion costs to be present across a range of contexts and countries, providing a robust literature on which I build (Davies and Johns, 2013; Levendusky and Horowitz, 2012; Tomz, 2007; Trager and Vavreck, 2011).4 However, no experiment has examined how the public reacts when a leader escalates a negotiation, fails to follow through on a threat or promise, and then negotiates a settlement or compromise. Using a similar framework as previous studies, I fielded a series of online survey experiments. Experiment 1 was fielded in the spring of 2014 on a sample of 916 respondents. Experiment 2 was fielded in spring of 2013 on a sample of 1761 respondents. Both studies recruited respondents using Amazon’s Mechanical Turk and a discussion of the demographics of the samples and the limitations and advantages of them is provided in the appendix, section 1. While Berinksy et al. (2012) and others have shown the reliability of mTurk results in many areas, Experiment 3 fielded a truncated version of the experiment on a nationally representative sample of 613 respondents administered by Survey Sampling International (SSI) in the spring of 2016.5 The three experiments find consistent results across four years of study and di↵erent sample populations, showing the results are not a function of time or sample method. The fourth experiment was fielded by SSI on a nationally representative sample of 543 Americans in the spring of 2016. Experiment 4 was designed to test the theories of compromise and proposal 4 For further discussion on the apprpriateness of experiments for this project see appendix, section 1. 5 Additional details regarding the national sample and a comparison of core results across studies are provided in the appendix, section 2. For examples of publications in leading political science journals using SSI studies, see Berinsky, Margolis, and Sances (2014); Kertzer and Brutger (2016); Malhotra, Margalit, and Mo (2013). 9 power in a new issue area – international economics. Since the public’s perception of the high politics of national security may di↵er from how they view the low politics of international economics, it is important to test whether the theories put forth explain perceptions of negotiation strategies and foreign policy across issue areas. The results of the fourth experiment provide further support for the theory of proposal power and the partisan nature of public opinion toward compromise. I will return to Experiment 4 after a discussion of the three security focused experiments. The first three experiments began with a script that read: “The following questions are about U.S. relations with other countries around the world. You will read about a situation our country has faced many times in the past and will probably face again. Di↵erent leaders have handled the situation in di↵erent ways. We will describe one approach U.S. leaders have taken, and ask whether you approve or disapprove.” Respondents next read about a crisis where a country sent its military to take over a territorial region in a neighboring country. To avoid country-specific confounders and to maintain comparability with previous studies, the scenarios deliberately avoided using any country names for the foreign parties. After reading the background on the crisis, respondents were randomly assigned one of the president’s strategies. While each of the first three experiments follow a similar approach, Experiment 3 employs somewhat di↵erent language to address potential concerns with the first experiments. I begin by introducing the text from Experiment 1 and then progress through a discussion of the modifications made to the treatments in Experiments 2 and 3. In the baseline condition, labeled Stay Out, the president does not engage in the crisis. • Stay Out: “The U.S. president, who was a Democrat (or Republican), said the United States would stay out of the conflict. The attacking country continued to invade and the conflict ended with the attacking country taking control of 20 percent of the contested territory.” In each of the remaining treatment conditions the U.S. escalated with a threat and then the respondent was randomly assigned to the Compromise, Engage, or Not Engage condition: Threat: “The U.S. president, who was a Democrat (or Republican), said that if the attacking country continued to invade, the United States military would immediately engage and attempt to push out the attacking country. The president sent troops to the region.” • Compromise Condition: “The attacking country continued to invade, but the president did not immediately engage. The U.S. president (or leader of the attacking country) proposed 10 a settlement, which was agreed to by all parties, and the conflict ended with the attacking country taking control of 20 percent of the contested territory.”6 • Engage Condition: “The attacking country continued to invade and the U.S. president ordered the military to engage. The U.S. did not lose any troops in the conflict and the conflict ended with the attacking country taking control of 20 percent of the contested territory.” • Not Engage Condition: “The attacking country continued to invade. The U.S. president ordered the military not to engage. The attacking country continued to invade and the conflict ended with the attacking country taking control of 20 percent of the contested territory.” For those respondents in the Compromise condition, there is an additional nested treatment that specifies who proposed the negotiated settlement. After reading the president’s choice of action, respondents were provided a summary of the events. Respondents were then asked whether they “approve, disapprove, or neither approve nor disapprove of the way the U.S. president handled the situation” and then how strongly they felt that way. These responses generated the dependent variable, which is an approval score on a seven point scale ranging from -3 being strongly disapprove to +3 being strongly approve. A challenge of evaluating public approval for leaders’ strategies in real-world negotiations is that audiences are likely to have preferences over both the strategy used by the leader and the policy outcomes of the crisis (Chaudoin, 2014; Snyder and Borghard, 2011). While disaggregating the audience’s preference for outcomes and strategies is challenging in observational studies, using an experimental scenario allows the magnitude of the domestic cost to be measured while holding policy outcomes constant. In order to isolate the cost across all strategies, as noted in the treatments above, and for comparability to recent studies, I control for the outcomes across all conditions in Experiment 1.7 This allows me to first test how the president’s strategy alone a↵ects the magnitude of audience costs. I then analyze nested treatments in Experiment 2 to test whether approval for compromise is conditioned by proposal power and whether additional concessions that lead to worse policy outcomes influence approval.8 Experiment 3 is a modified version of the first experiments, which repeats the tests of proposal power and partisanship on a nationally representative sample fielded by SSI. Experiment 3 also 6 In earlier versions, the Compromise treatment wording did not include “which was agreed to by all parties,” and the results remained consistent. I also tested audience reactions when the conflict ended with the attacking country taking control of 50 percent of the contested territory. The results were not significantly di↵erent when the compromise gave the attacking country 50 percent of the territory – a finding that is discussed in greater detail in the results section. 7 Casualties are held constant at zero. A further discussion of the importance of holding casualties and territory constant at these levels is provided in the appendix, section 3. 8 The full text of the Experiment 2 treatments appears in the appendix, section 4. 11 modifies the language of the compromise treatment to address potential concerns regarding the lexical equivalence of the compromise and not engage treatments in the first two experiments. In the first two experiments the compromise treatment included language that the president “did not immediately engage”. This language was chosen to emphasize the inconsistency of the president failing to follow through on his threat to “immediately engage”, however it di↵ers in that the not engage treatment says “the president ordered the military not to engage”. While the treatments across the experiments all emphasize the same general strategic choices, Experiment 3 shows that the results are consistent when the language is modified to “the president ordered the military not to engage” in the compromise condition, which is identical to the corresponding language in the not engage treatment of experiments 1 and 2. The exact wording for experiment 3 is as follows: • Compromise Conditions: The attacking country continued to invade, but the U.S. president ordered the military not to engage. The U.S. president (or leader of the attacking country) proposed a settlement, which was agreed to by the parties, and the conflict ended with the attacking country taking control of 20 percent of the contested territory. Results: Security Experiments The average approval scores, conditional on the party of the president, for Experiments 1 and 2 are reported in Figure 1.9 These results hold the outcome of the crisis constant, with the foreign country taking over 20 percent of the territory in each scenario, isolating the e↵ect of the president’s strategy. The first notable result is that both experiments replicate previous studies’ findings that audience costs exist for leaders in the Not Engage condition, where the leader makes a threat, does not follow through on it, and has no further involvement in the crisis. The Not Engage condition consistently receives the lowest approval score regardless of whether the president is a Republican or Democrat. These findings suggests that the experiments capture the baseline audience cost e↵ect as in previous studies (Davies and Johns, 2013; Levendusky and Horowitz, 2012; Tomz, 2007; Trager and Vavreck, 2011), which is a necessary starting point given that the following results focus on mitigating public disapproval through compromise. 9 The average approval scores not conditioned on party of the president are shown in the appendix, section 5. 12 Average Approval Score for Each Strategy With a Republican as President Republican President Experiment 1 ● Experiment 2 1 ● 0 ● −1 ● ● −2 Average Approval Score 2 Figure 1: Stay Out Engage Not Engage ● ● 0 1 2 Democrat President Experiment 1 ● Experiment 2 ● −1 ● −2 Average Approval Score Compromise Stay Out Engage Not Engage Compromise Figure 1 shows the average approval score and 90 percent confidence intervals for experiments 1 and 2 for each randomly assigned crisis strategy and party of the president. Outcomes are held constant with no casualties and 20% territory gained by the attacking country. The approval score is measured on a scale from -3=Strongly Disapprove to 3=Strongly Approve. The E↵ect of Compromise Figure 1 also shows that regardless of the president’s partisanship, and even when holding outcomes constant, audiences prefer leaders who back down from their threat and negotiate a compromise, as opposed to those who simply choose not to engage after having made a threat, providing support for 13 hypothesis 1. The impact of shifting from the not engage condition to the compromise condition is even more pronounced when analyzing the percent of respondents who approved of the President’s handling of the situation. In Experiments 1 and 2, the percent of respondents approving of the president is 20.6 (p<0.01) and 26.2 (p=0.02) percentage points higher when the president compromises than when she chooses not to engage.10 However, the general results obscure the e↵ect of partisan audiences since they do not account for the interaction of the audience and the President’s partisanship. To fully examine partisanship, Table 1 presents the results, conditional on both the party of the audience and the president.11 For each combination of partisan audience and party affiliation of the president, average public approval is higher in the Compromise condition than the Not Engage condition.12 The di↵erence in means between these conditions is always positive and is statistically significant for audiences of Democrats, while the results are positive but not significant for Republicans. Without taking into consideration the president’s proposal power, which will be discussed in subsequent sections, Table 1 suggests that audiences, particularly Democrats, prefer leaders who reach compromise settlements as opposed to not engaging after a threat, which supports both hypotheses 1 and 4.13 Table 1: Experiment 1 - Di↵erences in Approval Between Not Engage and Compromise Party of Audience Republican Democrat President is Democrat 0.39 (0.38) 1.57*** (3.94) President is Republican 1.07 (1.37) 1.34*** (3.15) Statistical significance: ⇤ p<0.1; ⇤⇤ p<0.05; ⇤⇤⇤ p<0.01 Table 1 shows the di↵erence in average approval scores (Compromise N ot Engage) and t-statistics among Democrats and Republicans based on the party of the president while holding territorial and casualty outcomes constant at no casualties and 20% territory gained by the attacking country. The approval score is measured on a scale from -3=Strongly Disapprove to 3=Strongly Approve. 10 Additional results using a dichotomous measure of whether respondents approved or not of the president’s handling of the situation are shown in the appendix, section 6. 11 The full results for Experiment 1 and Experiment 2 are reported in the appendix, section 7. 12 Results for Independents are reported in the appendix, section 8. 13 The experiment also finds support for the portrayal of Republicans as more hawkish, as is shown in the appendix, section 7. On average, republicans are more supportive of engagement, relative to staying out, than Democrats. 14 To understand why audiences tend to favor compromise, I examine the most prominent explanation for why audiences choose to punish leaders’ inconsistency – reputational concerns (Brutger and Kertzer, 2015; Fearon, 1994; Guisinger and Smith, 2002; Weeks, 2008; Tomz, 2007). To measure concerns about reputation, each respondent was asked “On a scale of 1-5, how much damage do you think there would be to the President’s reputation as a result of the President’s handling of the situation?” When leaders chose to reach a compromise, after backing down from a threat, as opposed to not engaging, they received a significant improvement in their perceived reputation (0.65, p < 0.01). These results are confirmed using nonparametric mediation analysis (Imai et al., 2010) to test how perceptions of reputation a↵ect approval of the president’s handling of the situation. When examining the increase in approval from the Not Engage to the Compromise condition, the mediating e↵ect of reputation is responsible for 61 percent of the increase in approval (p < 0.01).14 These findings demonstrate that leaders who are concerned about their reputations among domestic audiences, can preserve or enhance their reputations by reaching diplomatic compromises. Sensitivity to Outcomes While audiences favor leaders who negotiate compromise settlements over leaders who back down and don’t engage, the next question is whether these results are robust to variations in crisis outcomes. Snyder and Borghard argue that the substantive policy outcomes of a crisis play a significant role in determining public approval, which could undermine the mitigating e↵ect of compromise on audience costs if leaders are punished for making additional concessions (Snyder and Borghard, 2011). To evaluate this concern, Experiment 2 tested the sensitivity of audiences’ approval to randomly varied crisis outcomes. Experiment 2 follows the same structure as the first experiment, but the amount of territory gained by the attacking country was varied.15 I also randomly assigned the number of casualties within the Engage condition, with the expectation that additional casualties will decrease approval for engagement (Gartner, 2008; Gartner and Segura, 1998; Gelpi, Feaver, and Reifler, 2005). Interestingly, I find that audiences do not punish leaders for worse outcomes in the Compromise condition. The outcomes of the negotiated settlement led to the foreign country gaining a baseline of 20 percent of the contested territory or an additional 30 percent, which emphasizes the leader’s 14 The mediation results are shown in the appendix, section 9. A discussion of Experiment 2 and the full treatment conditions are provided in the appendix, section 4. 15 15 concessions when compromising. Among Democrats the shift in average approval when the attacking foreign country gained an additional 30 percent of the territory was essentially zero at 0.11 (p=0.72) and among Republicans it was -0.45 (p=0.34). In contrast to the Compromise condition, audiences of Democrats are sensitive to outcomes in the Engage condition. Table 2 shows the e↵ects of changes in territorial outcomes and casualties on public approval in the Engage condition. The outcomes of the military engagement led to the foreign country gaining either none or 20 percent of the contested territory and the U.S. experienced either no casualties or 1,000 casualties in the engagement. In the event the foreign country did not gain any territory, Democrats’ approval score dropped by 1.03 (p=0.01) when there were 1,000 casualties in comparison to no casualties. The e↵ect of the foreign country gaining 20 percent of the territory (with no casualties) is similar, with a decline in approval score among Democrats of 1.13 (p<0.01). Republicans on the other hand did not show a significant change in approval in response to crisis outcomes and instead consistently support military engagement. These results support the characterization of Republicans as consistently hawkish, whereas Democrats’ approval of military strategies is highly dependent on how favorable an outcome is achieved. Table 2: Experiment 2 - Di↵erences in Approval Based on Outcomes Party of Audience Republican Democrat Casualties -0.35 (-0.51) -1.03*** (-2.63) Territory -0.35 (-0.51) -1.13*** (-3.02) Casualties and Territory 0.40 (0.77) -1.84*** (-4.74) Statistical significance: ⇤ p<0.1; ⇤⇤ p<0.05; ⇤⇤⇤ p<0.01 Table 2 shows the di↵erence in average approval scores for the Engage condition based on the crisis outcomes, showing the e↵ects of 1,000 casualties, the hostile country gaining 30% more territory, or both, along with the t-statistics among Democrats and Republicans. The approval score is measured on a scale from -3=Strongly Disapprove to 3=Strongly Approve. 16 Proposal Power A final component of compromises that is likely to impact audiences’ approval is the perception of the leader’s role in reaching a settlement, specifically whether they exercise proposal power. To test the e↵ect of proposal power, Experiment 2 randomly assigned whether a compromise was proposed by the president or the foreign leader. The power of being the proposer generally plays in the favor of the president, but partisanship plays a significant role in conditioning the audience’s response. To measure the role of partisanship, I analyze proposal power across di↵erent combinations of the president’s party and the audience’s party. I use a “Party Match” variable that indicates whether the audience member and president are from the same party. As is shown in Figure 2, Democrats consistently have favorable opinions of presidents who are Democrats and agree to compromises, regardless of whether the president proposes or accepts the compromise. The only situation where Democrats look unfavorably on compromise is when the president is a Republican and the compromise is initiated by the foreign leader. In contrast, and consistent with hypothesis 4, Republican audiences are more selective when supporting compromise. Republicans strongly support a Republican president when she proposes the compromise, but not when she accepts a compromise initiated by the foreign country. Consistent with hypotheses 2 and 3, these findings support the idea that audiences take cues from their leaders in international negotiations, resulting in greater support for the leader when she is a member of their party and when the domestic leader initiates the compromise. The results also confirm a long-held idea that “only Nixon could go to China,” meaning that Republican presidents, who are more likely to be viewed as hawks, actually have an easier time making peace (Cowen and Sutter, 1998; Schultz, 2005; Trager and Vavreck, 2011). A Republican president who proposes a compromise receives strong support from audiences of both parties, with support at 57.4 percent among Democrats and 59.1 percent among Republicans. In contrast, a Democrat who proposes a compromise receives strong support from her own party (58.5 percent), but only 25.0 percent support from Republicans, which highlights the partisan nature of compromise.16 The results from the nationally representative sample in Experiment 3 add further support to the influence of partisanship and proposal power on public opinion toward international compromises.17 16 Additional proposal power and partisanship results based a dichotomous measure of whether respondents approve are displayed in the appendix, section 6. 17 The full results for experiment 3 are displayed in the appendix, section 2. 17 Figure 2: Average Approval Score for Compromise Based on Party-Match and Proposal Power 1.5 Audience of: Democrats Republicans 1.0 0.5 ● ● 0.0 ● −1.0 −0.5 ● −1.5 Average Approval Score ● Party Match President Proposes Party Match Foreign Leader Proposes No Party Match President Proposes No Party Match Foreign Leader Proposes Figure 3 shows the average approval score and 90 percent confidence intervals for audiences of Democrats and Republicans based on whether the respondent and president are from the same party (party-match) interacted with whether the U.S. president or the foreign leader proposed the the negotiated settlement that was then agreed to by all countries, while holding crisis outcomes constant. The approval score is measured on a scale from -3=Srongly Disapprove to 3=Strongly Approve. Among both Democrats and Republicans, leaders always received the highest approval score from members of their own party when they exercised proposal power and initiated the compromise. Additionally, the results demonstrate that di↵erences in language across the experiments did not alter the underlying treatment e↵ects. Consistent with the results in Experiment 2, Experiment 3 found that the average approval score among Democrats was always positive when a compromise was reached by the Democratic leader or the compromise was proposed by the domestic leader. Across comparable conditions in experiments 2 and 3, the di↵erence in average approval scores was essentially zero (0.005, p=0.98), highlighting that the nationally representative and mTurk samples generated remarkably consistent results. Republicans have a somewhat lower average baseline approval in Experiment 3, but the comparable treatment e↵ect of switching from a Democrat to Republican president proposing the compromise, remains positive and significant (0.90, p=0.04). The robustness of the results across samples, experimental wording, and time demonstrate that proposal 18 power and partisanship play critical roles in shaping public support for international negotiations and compromise. Economic Negotiations To examine whether partisanship and proposal power a↵ect perceptions of compromise across issue areas, Experiment 4 tested attitudes toward compromise in an international investment dispute. The experiment was fielded in the spring of 2016 by SSI on a nationally representative sample of 543 respondents. The experiment presented respondents with a hypothetical investment dispute where a foreign firm sued the US using investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS) arbitration. Rather than duplicating all of the conditions from the earlier studies, Experiment 4 limits its focus to proposal power, randomizing whether the U.S. leader or the foreign leader proposed a compromise. The experiment also di↵ers in that it specifies President Obama as the U.S. leader, which means the party of the president is not varied. However, this has the added advantage of allowing us to see how the audience’s partisanship interacts with a known president and the e↵ect of that interaction on public approval. The respondents read about an investment dispute where “TransCorp”, a hypothetical company from a neighboring country, sued the U.S. and the Obama administration for $15 billion dollars.18 Similar to the security experiments, the situation involved the U.S. escalating the dispute with a clear promise to fight the challenge, specifying that the Obama administration would “fight the challenge until the arbitration panel made its decision.” After reading the president’s commitment, either the Obama administration or TransCorp “proposed a settlement granting TransCorp twenty percent of the value of the suit” and the settlement was accepted by the other party. After reading the scenario, respondents were asked the same approval question as in the earlier experiments. The results, which are displayed in Figure 3, show that when the U.S. leader proposes the settlement their approval score goes up by 0.4 (p<0.01). The e↵ect of proposal power based on the partisanship of the audience shows that Democrats approval score increases by 0.65 (p=0.04) whereas Republicans do not have a significant change in approval when President Obama proposes, with a shift in approval score of just 0.27 (p=0.51). To highlight the magnitude of these e↵ects, 18 The full text of the scenario is provided in the appendix, section 10. The scenario and monetary value at stake were based on an actual dispute between a canadian firm and the U.S. (King and Mauldin, 2016). 19 it is helpful to consider the change in the percent of Democrats and Republicans who support the settlement based on proposal power. Only 32 percent of Democrats support the settlement when the foreign leader proposes it, but support jumps to 63 percent when the U.S. leader proposes the agreement. In contrast, 24 percent of Republicans support the agreement when the foreign leader proposes, and 27 percent support when the U.S. leader proposes.19 These results add additional support to the findings that Republicans do not support international compromises proposed by Democrats and they have a lower baseline level of support for compromise as well. Figure 3: Average Approval Score for Compromise Based on Party-Match and Proposal Power 1.0 0.5 ● −1.0 −0.5 0.0 ● −1.5 Average Approval Score 1.5 Audience of: Democrats Republicans ● US Proposes Foreign Leader Proposes Figure 3 shows the average approval score and 90 percent confidence intervals for audiences of Democrats and Republicans based on whether the U.S. leader or foreign leader proposed the compromise. The approval score is measured on a scale from -3=Srongly Disapprove to 3=Strongly Approve. One criticism that could be raised against the scenarios of the experiments, is that each includes an ultimatum threat or promise prior to the leader reaching a compromise. This sequence of negotiation events was chosen to be explicit that the leader was reaching a compromise, where they clearly backed down from their earlier bargaining position. However, since political negotiations are inherently strategic, it is worth asking whether the leader would have been better o↵ never making a threat in the first place. To test this proposition, Experiment 4 included an additional condition where President Obama never issued a threat or promise, but the same settlement was reached. 19 The di↵erence in di↵erence of proposal power among partisan groups for percent supporting is statistically significant (p=0.02) 20 In this final scenario respondents read “The Obama administration proposed a settlement granting TransCorp twenty percent of the value of the suit, and TransCorp accepted the settlement.” This condition was identical to the earlier condition where Obama proposed the settlement, with the exception that this final condition does not include the threat to fight the dispute to the end. The expectation among scholars who assume compromise is punished would be that approval would be lower for the leader who made a threat and then backed down from it to reach a settlement, as opposed to a leader who reached the same settlement without the threat. However, the results show that there is no di↵erence in approval score between the two conditions (0.04, p=0.39) among the full sample. Among Democrats the approval score is actually slightly higher for the leader who backs down and then reaches a compromise (0.24, p<0.01)20 and among republicans there is no di↵erence (0.04, p=0.63). The results of the investment experiment provide the first analysis of how public opinion toward compromise and proposal power translate across issue areas. While the investment experiment did not include every potential treatment condition to test each hypothesis, the results supported hypotheses two, three, and four, showing that proposal power and partisanship have a significant e↵ect on support for negotiated outcomes and compromise. The evidence presents a strong case that opinions toward compromise, and the partisan foundations that influence them, apply to both the high politics of security issues and the low politics of international economics. Conclusion The evidence put forth in this paper builds a case for a reformulation of how we think about public opinion and commitments in international bargaining. Three critical points emerge for understanding the role of domestic audiences in international bargaining. First, is that leaders can influence the level of public approval when negotiating a compromise by exercising proposal power. When leaders negotiate settlements and are perceived as the proposer they are able to protect their reputations, which allows them to mitigate or eliminate public disapproval. This introduces a new component to the bargaining dynamic that allows leaders to frame the bargaining outcome for their home audience and provides greater flexibility to the leader to negotiate concessions. 20 This is consistent with studies that found observers had greater satisfaction with negotioted outcomes when the negotiator made concessions (Benton, Kelley, and Liebling, 1972). 21 The second takeaway is that the composition of a leader’s audience is of vital importance when evaluating whether publics constrain leaders behavior and can create costly signals on the international stage. Whereas previous studies found that audience costs were non-partisan (Levendusky and Horowitz, 2012; Trager and Vavreck, 2011), I find that partisanship significantly a↵ects approval for compromise when both the audience and the leader’s partisanship are taken into account.21 Republican presidents have greater leeway to negotiate compromise settlements and receive strong support from audiences of Democrats and Republicans when they propose compromises. In contrast, presidents who are Democrats are more constrained and only receive support from their own party when they propose settlements. The role of partisanship in shaping public approval of foreign policy strategies adds further support to a growing literature which argues that increasingly politics does not stop at the water’s edge (Ahn, 2011; Cavari, 2013; Trubowitz and Mellow, 2005). Lastly, when we include the possibility of compromise, audiences rarely lock in leaders in international negotiations and domestic approval concerns are, at best, inconsistent signals of leaders’ resolve. Rather than assuming publics disapprove of compromise, as Morgenthau (1948) argues, these results fundamentally change how we think domestic audiences respond to international diplomacy. In the Syrian case, audience costs theory would predict that the president’s public threat would generate domestic costs and that the decision not to follow through on the threat would result in the president being punished. While some elites criticized the president and argued that the failure to follow through with military action hurt the president’s credibility (Sink, 2014), the general public was supportive of the compromise.22 Public approval for the president’s handling of foreign policy showed no decline after the president failed to follow through on his threat. According to CBS and NBC/Wall Street Journal Polls, the president’s foreign policy approval ratings were 43 and 46 percent respectively in the months before Syria used chemical weapons and stayed relatively consistent at 45 and 46 percent following Syria’s use of chemical weapons (Polling Report, 2014). When specifically asked about President Obama’s handling of foreign policy toward Syria, 56 percent of Republicans and 80 percent of Democrats supported the decision not to engage in airstrikes and instead pursue a compromise strategy (Pew Research, 2013). This case illustrates the 21 Although compromise appears to be a partisan issue, Figure 1 shows that both Republicans and Democrats impose audience costs for the traditional audience cost treatment e↵ect, which is consistent with earlier findings. 22 While elite cues play an important role in shaping public opinion (Berinsky, 2007; Saunders, 2015), in this case the general public did not follow the cues of the more hawkish critics, such as Panetta (Sink, 2014). 22 importance of evaluating how public opinion responds to negotiations that go beyond the traditional crisis bargaining model, where the leader either attacks or backs down, and shows how the potential for compromise can prevent leaders from tying their hands in international negotiations. While President Obama issued a prominent public threat in the Syrian crisis, he was able to accept a compromise settlement and avoid being punished by the general public. Given that the president was generally perceived as accepting a foreign leader’s proposal, this example is a least likely case for compromise to successfully mitigate audience costs, yet audiences across the political spectrum supported the President’s decision not to follow through on his threat. However, partisanship still played a key role in shaping public opinion, evidenced by the 24 percentage point higher approval among Democrats than Republicans for President Obama’s choice to pursue a compromise. This example highlights the role of compromise in allowing leaders to maintain public support and the importance of reconsidering how publics react to international negotiations. 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Web: http://web.sas.upenn.edu/brutger/. 1 1 Sample Demographics and Methodology Choosing Experiments: In addition to the discussion in the main text, it is worth noting that an additional advantage of using survey experiments to test the e↵ects of compromise and proposal power, is that survey experiments represent the most likely case to observe audience costs, making them a harder case for the ameliorating e↵ects of compromise and proposal power. In traditional audience cost experiments the leader’s threat and subsequent inconsistency are temporally proximate and thus audiences should be most likely to punish leaders who back down, whereas in real-world settings audiences may have more difficulty connecting a past threat to the leader’s current choice of action. Furthermore, respondents are not presented with competing messages about the efficacy or value of the engagement,1 which means respondents are more likely to focus on the leader’s threat and subsequent inconsistency. For each of these reasons, experiments represent the most likely situation for leaders to be punished, making them an ideal manner in which to test whether compromise and proposal power can overcome the negative e↵ect of leaders’ inconsistency. Sample Sizes and Recruitment Methodology: Experiment 1: Fielded using Amazon Mechanical Turk in 2014 on a sample of 916 respondents. Experiment 2: Fielded using Amazon Mechanical Turk in 2013 on a sample of 1761 respondents. Experiment 3: Fielded on a nationally representative sample of 613 respondents using Survey Sampling International. Experiment 4: Fielded on a nationally representative sample of 543 respondents using Survey Sampling International. SSI uses an opt-in recruitment method, after which they randomly select panel participants for survey invitations, using population targets rather than quotas to produce nationally representative samples of respondents. 1 See Levendusky and Horowitz (2012) for an exception, where respondents are presented with new information justifying the change in policy. 2 Limits and Advantages of mTurk samples: Samples from mTurk are increasingly widely used in both political science and elsewhere in the social sciences because of the extent to which they can replicate classic experiments on more diverse samples than those traditionally employed in political psychology research, as recent review pieces by Berinksy et al. (2012), Buhrmester, Kwang, and Gosling (2011), Horton, Rand, and Zeckhauser (2011), Paolacci, Chandler, and Iperiotis (2010), and Rand (2012) make clear. As is common in online surveys, the mTurk samples are more male, educated and liberal than the American population as a whole – 56.2% of respondents were male, 58.9% have at least a four-year college degree, and 51.3% identify themselves as being liberals in Experiment 2. However, the samples are particularly useful, since I focus my analysis on specific partisan subgroups, and thus draw conclusions contingent on the relevant subgroup. Since the political skew of the sample is a primary concern in many political science applications of mTurk surveys, I explicitly focus on within-party treatment e↵ects, as opposed to focusing on national averages. For this reason, I do not employ survey weights to create a synthetically representative sample. Furthermore, across comparable conditions in experiments 2 and 3, the di↵erence in average approval scores was essentially zero (0.005, p=0.98), highlighting that the nationally representative and mTurk samples generated remarkably consistent results. 3 Sample Populations Table 1: Sample Populations Experiment 1 Experiment 2 Experiment 3 Experiment 4 25.4 63.1 10.3 1.2 19.1 63.6 15.7 1.6 11.6 36.7 33.8 20.8 9.5 32.9 38.9 21.3 IN COM E Percent $0-$50,000 Percent $50,000-$100,000 Percent $100,000-$150,000 Percent $150,000-$200,000 Percent $200,000+ 60.0 30.7 5.8 2.2 1.3 56.1 34.8 5.6 2.2 1.5 46.8 33.5 11.7 4.8 3.3 43.9 33.1 12.0 8.3 2.7 EDU CAT ION Less than High School High School / GED Some College College Degree Masters Degree PhD / JD / MD 0.5 12.7 31.1 47.5 5.7 2.5 0.7 10.9 29.4 48.4 8.0 2.5 2.6 27.5 11.4 39.8 13.6 5.2 3.1 25.5 13.1 38.6 15.0 4.6 AGE Percent Percent Percent Percent Age Age Age Age 18-24 25-44 45-64 65+ Not all percentages add to 100 due to rounding . 4 2 Comparing Results of Experiments 2 and 3 Figure 1: Experiment 3 - Average Approval Score for Each Strategy 1.5 Audience of: Democrats Republicans 1.0 0.5 ● ● −1.0 −0.5 0.0 ● −1.5 Average Approval Score ● Party Match President Proposes Party Match Foreign Leader Proposes No Party Match President Proposes No Party Match Foreign Leader Proposes Figure 1 shows the average approval score and 90 percent confidence intervals for audiences of Democrats and Republicans based on whether the US leader or foreign leader proposed the compromise. The approval score is measured on a scale from -3=Srongly Disapprove to 3=Strongly Approve. Comparing the results displayed in Figure 1 of the appendix to those in Figure 2 of the main paper illustrates that the e↵ects are remarkably consistent across the mTurk and SSI samples. In each study, proposal power and partisanship lead to the highest approval scores for leaders who initiate the compromise among respondents of their own political party. These results highlight that di↵erences in wording, and potential concerns about the wording in Experiments 1 and 2, do not alter the fundamental results of the paper. Due to a randomization error in Experiment 3, no treatment condition with a Republican president and the foreign leader proposing the compromise was presented. However, there were still six relevant treatment groups, as shown in Figure 1, that provide a useful comparison of results across samples and treatment wordings, which demonstrate that the main results are consistent across all three security experiments. 5 3 The Impact of Holding Outcomes Constant The Impact of Holding Casualties Constant: In order to isolate the treatment e↵ect of the leader’s strategy, it is necessary that casualties are held constant at zero across all conditions, otherwise respondents’ approval could shift because of di↵erent outcomes as opposed to strategies. In the control and treatment conditions that do not result in military engagement (Stay Out, Not Engage, and Compromise) casualties are obviously at zero, and thus no mention of casualties is included. However, in the Engage condition respondents may assume higher costs resulting from war,2 even if outcomes are not explicitly varied (for a related point, see Sher and McKenzie (2006) and Tomz and Weeks (2013) on “information leakage”). To avoid conflating respondent’s expectations about the human cost of war with approval for the leader’s strategy, I specify that casualties are zero in the engage condition. This inclusion means that the treatment conditions are not lexically equivalent, but instead they are logically equivalent. This technique was also used by Kertzer and Brutger (2016) who tested the e↵ect of making the conditions lexically equivalent by omitting any mention of casualties in the Engage condition. Kertzer and Brutger found that audiences do indeed impose a higher cost when casualties are not mentioned, which means I am choosing a more conservative measure here, since any bias introduced by specifying casualties at zero would make the Engage treatment relatively more appealing to audiences (meaning that Compromise would be relatively less appealing). The Impact of Holding Territory Constant: Territorial outcomes are held constant with the attacking country gaining 20 percent of the territory so that there is common support across all treatment conditions and the support is realistic given the strategy of the president. Since a compromise means that neither party completely backs down from their position, the territorial outcome cannot be set to 0 percent for the attacking country. This does raise a potential concern, since any military engagement where the other party receives anything could be viewed as a loss. This means that some respondents may interpret the common support as a loss in the engage condition, which would put downward pressure on approval in the engage treatment condition. Three points are worth noting in response to this concern. First, although the territorial outcome 2 This would be expected, given that the crisis bargaining model explicitly includes a cost of war that is separate from the division of the contested prize. 6 could put downward pressure on approval since the attacking country was allowed to gain some territory, this concern should apply to all treatment conditions. If a respondent views the 20 percent territorial outcome as a loss for the U.S., it should be viewed as a loss in all conditions. If the experiment had di↵erent territorial outcomes more favorable to the U.S. in the engage condition than the others, then it would be conflating approval for the outcome itself with the strategy used to achieve it. That said, the question of whether the salience of the perceived loss is heightened when the U.S. military is engaged, which may change expectations of the public, is one that deserves further analysis, but remains beyond the scope of this project. Second, given that the scenario holds casualties to zero, any potential downward bias due to the territorial outcome will be partially o↵set by the optimistic outcome of having a military engagement with zero casualties. As is discussed above, the scenario represents a conservative test in this manner, since zero casualties in the engage condition puts upward pressure on the approval score in the Engage condition, making the comparison of the Compromise treatment to the Engage condition an even harder test for this study than would likely occur in a real conflict where casualties would be a realistic possibility. Lastly, the concern raised only a↵ects comparisons between the Engage and Compromise treatments, but has no bearing on the tests of proposal power and partisanship. Even if the two proceeding points do not alleviate the readers concerns, the vast majority of results in the paper do not rely on comparisons with the Engage condition. The only section of the paper analyzing the Engage condition is the Sensitivity to Outcomes Section, which means all other results are una↵ected and thus those results cannot be biased by the Engage treatment. 7 4 Experiment 2 - Treatments Experiment 2 followed a similar format at Experiment 1, but includes additional treatments to test how sensitive audiences are to crisis outcomes. Each of the treatment conditions varies: 1) The strategy of the president 2) The partisanship of the president 3) The outcomes of the crisis Within the Compromise condition, there is an additional treatment that varies whether the U.S. president or the leader of the foreign country proposed the compromise. The crisis outcome treatments, which vary both the territory gained and casualties, are designed with two goals in mind. The first is to have common support across all conditions, meaning that there is a common policy outcome across all treatments. This allows the e↵ect of the other treatments to be examined while holding outcomes constant. This study follows Kertzer and Brutger (2016) and uses 20 percent of the territory gained by the attacking country and no casualties as the common outcome. The second goal of the treatment is to have the variation in outcomes follow realistic conditions, meaning that shifts away from the common policy outcomes reflect that the U.S. receives better outcomes when they use force than when they don’t. Additionally, the casualty treatments are limited to the Engage condition, since it is not realistic to have military casualties when the U.S. does not engage. For a further discussion on casualties, please see appendix, section 3. • Stay Out: “The U.S. president, who was a [Democrat or Republican], said that the United States would stay out of the conflict. The attacking country continued to invade and took control of [20 or 50] percent of the contested territory. ” Consistent with Experiment 1, in each of the remaining treatment conditions the U.S. escalated with a threat and then the respondents were randomly assigned to one of the following conditions. Threat: “The U.S. president, who was a [Democrat or Republican], said that if the attacking country continued to invade, the United States military would immediately engage and attempt to push out the attacking country. The president sent troops to the region.” • Compromise: “The attacking country continued to invade, but the president did not immediately engage. The [U.S. president or leader of the attacking country] proposed a settlement, which was agreed to by all parties, where the attacking country stopped its invasion and took control of [20 or 50] percent of the contested territory.” 8 • Engage: “The attacking country continued to invade and the U.S. president ordered the military to engage. [The U.S. did not loose any troops or The U.S. lost 1,000 troops] in the conflict and the conflict ended with the attacking country [not taking control of any of the contested territory or taking control of 20 percent of the contested territory].” • Not Engage: “The attacking country continued to invade. The U.S. president ordered the military not to engage. The attacking country continued to invade and took control of [20 or 50] percent of the contested territory.” Experiment 2 also di↵ers from Experiments 1 and 3, since Experiments 1 and 3 did not include the language “where the attacking country stopped its invasion” in the compromise condition. The language in Experiment 2 adds emphasis to the fact that the settlement stopped the attack, which could be argued to bias results in favor of the compromise condition. To test whether this di↵erence in language biased the results, the comparable results are shown in the main paper in figure 1. Figure 1 shows that average approval in the compromise conditions is not higher in Experiment 2 than Experiment 1, alleviating concerns that approval for compromise is driven by this di↵erence in language. In aggregate, the results across all four experiments show that the compromise treatment e↵ects are not conditioned by changes in the issue area or modest changes to the wording of the scenario. 9 Average Approval Not Conditioned on Party of the President. Average Approval Score for Each Strategy 2 Figure 2: 1 Experiment 1 Experiment 2 ● 0 ● ● ● −1 Average Approval Score ● −2 5 Stay Out Engage Not Engage Compromise Figure 2 shows the average approval score and 90 percent confidence intervals for experiments 1 and 2 for each randomly assigned crisis strategy. Outcomes are held constant with no casualties and 20% territory gained by the attacking country. The approval score is measured on a scale from -3=Strongly Disapprove to 3=Strongly Approve. 10 6 Results Based on Percent Approving Figures 3 and 4 replicate the top and bottom panels of Figure 1 from the main paper, but show the percent of respondents who approve of the president’s handling of the crisis instead of the seven point approval score. The results are generally consistent regardless of whether the dependent variable is a dichotomous measure of approval or the full approval score used in the main analysis. 80 Figure 3: Percent Approving for Each Strategy 60 ● 50 ● 40 ● 30 Percent Approving 70 Republican President Experiment 1 ● Experiment 2 20 ● Stay Out Engage Not Engage Compromise Figure 3 shows the percent of respondents who approve and 90 percent confidence intervals for audiences of Democrats and Republicans based when a Republican is president. Approval is measured as those who lean toward approving, somewhat approve, or strongly approve. 80 Figure 4: Percent Approving for Each Strategy ● 50 60 ● 40 ● ● 20 30 Percent Approving 70 Democrat President Experiment 1 ● Experiment 2 Stay Out Engage Not Engage Compromise Figure 4 shows the percent of respondents who approve and 90 percent confidence intervals for audiences of Democrats and Republicans based when a Democrat is president. Approval is measured as those who lean toward approving, somewhat approve, or strongly approve. 11 Figure 5 replicates Figure 2 from the main paper, but shows the percent of respondents who approve of the president’s handling of the crisis instead of the seven point approval score. The results are generally consistent regardless of whether the dependent variable is a dichotomous measure of approval or the full approval score used in the main analysis. 80 Figure 5: Percent Approving for Each Strategy Audience of: Democrats Republicans 60 ● ● 50 ● 40 ● 20 30 Percent Approving 70 ● Party Match President Proposes Party Match Foreign Leader Proposes No Party Match President Proposes No Party Match Foreign Leader Proposes Figure 5 shows the percent of respondents who approve and 90 percent confidence intervals for audiences of Democrats and Republicans based on whether the respondent and the president are from the same party (party-match) interacted with whether the U.S. president or the foreign leader proposed the negotiated settlement. Approval is measured as those who lean toward approving, somewhat approve, or strongly approve. 12 7 Full Results for Experiments 1 and 2 Table 2: Experiment 1: Di↵erences in Approval Score for Strategies and Party Di↵erence in Means Audience of Democrats & President who is Democrat Stay Out Engage Not Engage -0.42 (-0.75) -2.17*** (-4.94) -1.75*** (-3.11) -0.60 (-1.50) -0.18 (0.33) 1.57*** (3.94) -1.33*** (-2.82) -1.71*** (-3.65) -0.38 (-0.73) -0.37 (-1.03) 0.96** (2.23) 1.34*** (3.15) 0.33 (0.28) -2.00** (-2.31) -2.33* (-1.91) -0.93 (-1.22) -1.26 (-1.10) 1.07 (1.37) 0.61 (0.50) -1.75 (-1.68) -2.36 (-1.66) -1.36* (-1.85) -1.97 (-1.63) 0.39 (0.38) Engage Not Engage Audience of Democrats & President who is Republican Stay Out Engage Not Engage Audience of Republicans & President who is Republican Stay Out Engage Not Engage Audience of Republicans & President who is Democrat Stay Out Engage Not Engage Compromise ⇤ p<0.1; ⇤⇤ p<0.05; ⇤⇤⇤ p<0.01 Note: Table 2 shows the di↵erence in average approval scores (Column Score Row Score) and t-statistics among Democrats and Republicans based on strategies and the party of the president while holding territorial and casualty outcomes constant at no casualties and 20% territory gained by the attacking country. The approval score is measured on a scale from -3=Srongly Disapprove to 3=Strongly Approve. 13 Table 3: Experiment 2: Di↵erences in Approval Score for Strategies and Party Di↵erence in Means Audience of Democrats & President who is Democrat Stay Out Engage Not Engage -0.08 (-0.24) -1.27*** (-4.44) -1.35*** (-3.97) -0.45 (-1.53) 0.53 (1.53) 0.82*** (2.78) 0.03 (0.10) -1.67*** (-6.22) -1.70*** (-5.00) -0.90*** (-3.15) -0.93*** (-2.64) 0.76*** (2.61) 0.97 (1.55) -1.81*** (-3.51) -2.78*** (-4.61) -0.31 (-0.62) -1.27** (-2.16) 1.50*** (3.16) 0.70 (1.15) -1.36** (–2.45) -2.07*** (-2.37) -0.92* (-1.76) -1.62*** (-2.79) 1.50*** (3.16) Engage Not Engage Audience of Democrats & President who is Republican Stay Out Engage Not Engage Audience of Republicans & President who is Republican Stay Out Engage Not Engage Audience of Republicans & President who is Democrat Stay Out Engage Not Engage Compromise ⇤ p<0.1; ⇤⇤ p<0.05; ⇤⇤⇤ p<0.01 Note: Table 3 shows the di↵erence in average approval scores (Column Score Row Score) and t-statistics among Democrats and Republicans based on strategies and the party of the president while holding territorial and casualty outcomes constant at no casualties and 20% territory gained by the attacking country. The approval score is measured on a scale from -3=Srongly Disapprove to 3=Strongly Approve. 14 8 E↵ects Among Independents Table 4: Experiment 1: Di↵erences in Approval Score for Strategies and Party Di↵erence in Means Audience of Independents & President who is Democrat Stay Out Engage Not Engage -1.12* (-1.96) -1.63*** (-3.28) -0.51 (-0.85) -0.85** (-2.05) 0.28 (0.52) 0.79* (1.75) -1.11* (-1.95) -2.75*** (-6.53) -1.64*** (-3.00) -1.49*** (-3.71) -0.38 (-0.72) 1.26** (3.38) Engage Not Engage Audience of Independents & President who is Republican Stay Out Engage Not Engage Compromise ⇤ p<0.1; ⇤⇤ p<0.05; ⇤⇤⇤ p<0.01 Note: Table 4 shows the di↵erence in average approval scores (Column Score Row Score) and t-statistics among Independents based on strategies and the party of the president while holding territorial and casualty outcomes constant at no casualties and 20% territory gained by the attacking country. The approval score is measured on a scale from -3=Srongly Disapprove to 3=Strongly Approve. 15 9 Mediation Analysis - Reputation and Support for Compromise. Figure 6: Average Causal Mediation Analysis: The E↵ect of Repuation on Support for Compromise ACME ADE Total Effect 0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 1.2 Figure 4 shows the average causal mediation e↵ect (ACME) of reputation on audience approval, the average direct e↵ect (ADE) of the Compromise treatment (relative to Not Engage), the total e↵ect of both the mediation and treatment e↵ects, and 95 percent confidence intervals, calcualted using the mediation package in R (Tingley et al., 2014). Outcomes are held constant with no casualties and 20% territory gained by the attacking country. The approval score is measured on a scale from -3=Strongly Disapprove to 3=Strongly Approve, and the Reputation score is measured from 1 to 5. 16 10 Experiment 4 - Treatments Experiment 4 presented respondents with an investment dispute, which was presented in the format of a brief news report. The dependent variable is the same as in the first three experiments, where respondents were asked whether they approved, disapproved, or neither, and then how strongly they felt that way. The text of the experiment is as follows: Company Starts Legal Actions Over Investment Denial TransCorp., a hypothetical company based in a neighboring country, on Wednesday said it was pursuing legal actions against the United States and the Obama administration in response to its refusal to issue a border-crossing permit for the company’s project. TransCorp said in a statement that it would initiate an international arbitration case against the U.S. under an international agreement. Through a process known as investorstate dispute settlement (ISDS), companies and investors from one country can challenge the acts of a foreign government and receive compensation if they can show they weren’t treated in accordance with international law. TransCorp said it would attempt to recover more than $15 billion in costs and damages that the company said it has su↵ered as a result of the U.S. administration’s breach of its international obligations. The final paragraph of the report was randomly assigned, showing either the “U.S. proposes”, “foreign proposes”, or “U.S. proposes, without threat” treatments, which are shown below. • U.S. Proposes: The Obama administration originally responded by stating it would fight the challenge until the arbitration panel made its decision. 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