Why do politicians refuse to answer hypothetical questions? [on hold]
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Often I hear politicians say this "I don't answer hypothetical questions". Why can't hypothetical questions be answered? What are the grounds for politicians justify saying that? Is there a way to properly answer hypothetical questions?
political-theory
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put on hold as off-topic by bytebuster, Bad_Bishop, Jeff Lambert, Drunk Cynic, Jared Smith 7 hours ago
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
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If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
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up vote
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Often I hear politicians say this "I don't answer hypothetical questions". Why can't hypothetical questions be answered? What are the grounds for politicians justify saying that? Is there a way to properly answer hypothetical questions?
political-theory
New contributor
put on hold as off-topic by bytebuster, Bad_Bishop, Jeff Lambert, Drunk Cynic, Jared Smith 7 hours ago
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "This question does not appear to be about governments, policies and political processes within the scope defined in the help center." – bytebuster, Jeff Lambert, Drunk Cynic
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
You need to clarify your question. Who says it can't be answered? what are the ground but who said that, what politician? There are all kind of hypothetical question, do you have any specific concern?
– nelruk
16 hours ago
Perhaps they simply don’t want to answer the question, whether it is possible or not.
– chirlu
14 hours ago
Move this post over to Meta for Politics before closing. Probably because there are different ways and scenarios you can think of for those type of question. In theory, if this then that, if this then that, if this then that, and so on and so forth!! Whip cream with cherries, do this; chocolate with nuts, do that; and so on and so forth!!
– President Bernie Sanders
11 hours ago
1
I think this was a good question with a bad title, so I've edited the title.
– Paul Johnson
11 hours ago
add a comment |
up vote
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up vote
4
down vote
favorite
Often I hear politicians say this "I don't answer hypothetical questions". Why can't hypothetical questions be answered? What are the grounds for politicians justify saying that? Is there a way to properly answer hypothetical questions?
political-theory
New contributor
Often I hear politicians say this "I don't answer hypothetical questions". Why can't hypothetical questions be answered? What are the grounds for politicians justify saying that? Is there a way to properly answer hypothetical questions?
political-theory
political-theory
New contributor
New contributor
edited 11 hours ago
Paul Johnson
5,54231527
5,54231527
New contributor
asked 18 hours ago
user1589188
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1212
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New contributor
put on hold as off-topic by bytebuster, Bad_Bishop, Jeff Lambert, Drunk Cynic, Jared Smith 7 hours ago
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "This question does not appear to be about governments, policies and political processes within the scope defined in the help center." – bytebuster, Jeff Lambert, Drunk Cynic
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
put on hold as off-topic by bytebuster, Bad_Bishop, Jeff Lambert, Drunk Cynic, Jared Smith 7 hours ago
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "This question does not appear to be about governments, policies and political processes within the scope defined in the help center." – bytebuster, Jeff Lambert, Drunk Cynic
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
You need to clarify your question. Who says it can't be answered? what are the ground but who said that, what politician? There are all kind of hypothetical question, do you have any specific concern?
– nelruk
16 hours ago
Perhaps they simply don’t want to answer the question, whether it is possible or not.
– chirlu
14 hours ago
Move this post over to Meta for Politics before closing. Probably because there are different ways and scenarios you can think of for those type of question. In theory, if this then that, if this then that, if this then that, and so on and so forth!! Whip cream with cherries, do this; chocolate with nuts, do that; and so on and so forth!!
– President Bernie Sanders
11 hours ago
1
I think this was a good question with a bad title, so I've edited the title.
– Paul Johnson
11 hours ago
add a comment |
You need to clarify your question. Who says it can't be answered? what are the ground but who said that, what politician? There are all kind of hypothetical question, do you have any specific concern?
– nelruk
16 hours ago
Perhaps they simply don’t want to answer the question, whether it is possible or not.
– chirlu
14 hours ago
Move this post over to Meta for Politics before closing. Probably because there are different ways and scenarios you can think of for those type of question. In theory, if this then that, if this then that, if this then that, and so on and so forth!! Whip cream with cherries, do this; chocolate with nuts, do that; and so on and so forth!!
– President Bernie Sanders
11 hours ago
1
I think this was a good question with a bad title, so I've edited the title.
– Paul Johnson
11 hours ago
You need to clarify your question. Who says it can't be answered? what are the ground but who said that, what politician? There are all kind of hypothetical question, do you have any specific concern?
– nelruk
16 hours ago
You need to clarify your question. Who says it can't be answered? what are the ground but who said that, what politician? There are all kind of hypothetical question, do you have any specific concern?
– nelruk
16 hours ago
Perhaps they simply don’t want to answer the question, whether it is possible or not.
– chirlu
14 hours ago
Perhaps they simply don’t want to answer the question, whether it is possible or not.
– chirlu
14 hours ago
Move this post over to Meta for Politics before closing. Probably because there are different ways and scenarios you can think of for those type of question. In theory, if this then that, if this then that, if this then that, and so on and so forth!! Whip cream with cherries, do this; chocolate with nuts, do that; and so on and so forth!!
– President Bernie Sanders
11 hours ago
Move this post over to Meta for Politics before closing. Probably because there are different ways and scenarios you can think of for those type of question. In theory, if this then that, if this then that, if this then that, and so on and so forth!! Whip cream with cherries, do this; chocolate with nuts, do that; and so on and so forth!!
– President Bernie Sanders
11 hours ago
1
1
I think this was a good question with a bad title, so I've edited the title.
– Paul Johnson
11 hours ago
I think this was a good question with a bad title, so I've edited the title.
– Paul Johnson
11 hours ago
add a comment |
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
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up vote
7
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Not answering hypothetical questions is basic politics. There is nothing to gain in answering them. If you are running for political office (or even getting a promotion in your job) you should realize that any interview is about expressing your own agenda. Often your agenda is at odds with the interviewer's agenda.
There are several techniques that a veteran reporter will use to trip up a politician. For example the "negative statement without a question": "Many people think you are a terrible person"; the "assumption question": "Have you stopped being a terrible person?". These are combined into the "hypothetical situation where the conclusion is negative": "What would you do in situation X since you are a terrible person"
Only the beginner politician will attempt to answer any of those with "I'm not a terrible person". The correct answer and the one that shows you can lead is: "I am going to tell you about my agenda now"
However, even veteran politicians will fall for the interviewer's tricks. One example that comes to mind is George Stephonapolous Asking Presidential candidate Mitt Romney: Do you think the state have the right to ban contraceptives? After repeated backs and forth Mitt Admitted that they possibly could if they wanted to. After that Romney became the candidate that wants to ban contraceptives. People still remember that, but have no idea what his agenda was.
George Mitt Interview
2
What you call a "trick" is someone's effort to get an actual answer from a political figure.
– jeffronicus
11 hours ago
2
@jeffronicus it's both. As the politicians have learned to not answer, journalists learned to "trick" politicians into answering.
– Caleth
10 hours ago
1
The example question actually seems like a fairly legitimate question for a politician and the kind of thing that voters actually do need to know, vs hypothetical question. It's not a made up scenario vs asking about the politician's political beliefs and philosophies. I think the answer has some legitimate points about answering a hypothetical, but the example doesn't serve the question well. Not a down-vote or anything, more of a "you had me until...."
– PoloHoleSet
10 hours ago
George HW Bush being asked to declare that he would or would not ever raise taxes would probably be a better hypothetical example, IMO, or the Dukakis "would you still be against the death penalty if your wife was raped and murdered" hypothetical.
– PoloHoleSet
9 hours ago
@PoloHoleSet, I want to assure you that my point is academic. The battle between an interviewer and the interviewee is what makes media interesting. Who will prevail is exciting to the audience and makes or breaks the career of the interviewer. I hope it never changes
– Frank Cedeno
8 hours ago
|
show 3 more comments
up vote
5
down vote
The vast majority of the time, a politician's negatives come from what they have said, not what they haven't said. A politician can refuse to answer questions a thousand times without it hurting their career. Anything a politician does say, even if it is reasonable, can be taken out of context, treated as an incorrect response when it is a fine response, replayed in an attack ad over spooky music with ominous narration, later misquoted, and treated as a sufficient reason not to vote for that politician even though it is such a small part of their platform (or not even part of their platform at all).
The following are not examples of responses to hypothetical questions, but they are examples of how twisted quotes have been career-damaging and carried more weight than they should.
Example: famously, Al Gore is misquoted as claiming that he invented the internet, which he did not exactly claim, especially in those words; though he did credit himself with advancing the adoption of the internet in many ways, including the Supercomputer Network Study Act of 1986, the High Performance Computing and Communication Act of 1991, and other measures.
Example: Stacey Abrams gave a speech suggesting that the blue wave includes immigrants, documented and undocumented. It is obvious that she would not have meant that undocumented immigrants actually vote in the mid-terms (no politician would be dumb enough to say and mean this in a public forum), but that undocumented immigrants support the blue wave (in non-voting ways, including moral support and advocacy) and are supported by the blue wave. But some people deliberately misinterpreted this quote in order to claim that she was encouraging voter fraud.
Hypothetical questions in particular have several other factors that make them politically dangerous to tackle:
- They exist outside of the politician's message. If a politician wants voters to associate them with healthcare reform, then they don't want to answer a hypothetical that could lead to them being associate with a different topic.
- Hypotheticals exist outside of planned responses. This means whatever answer the politician gives will not be premeditated, does not give the benefit of conducting any background research, and therefore, the response is more likely to be wrong.
- It also means that the politician has to formulate an answer without assistance from strategy consultants, the policy director, the communications department, and so on.
- It is not a practiced answer, and therefore more likely to be delivered nervously, ineptly, and with gaffes.
- Hypotheticals lack the full context of the situation. If you are asked how you would handle a foreign country killing an American journalist, in real life you might take into account things like what is our diplomatic relationship with the country, what is our trade relationship with the country, what is the relative military strength between us and them, who within that country perpetrated the killing, why did they do it, who else knew, who authorized it, and so on. In a hypothetical, a lot of this context is obscured; so how are you supposed to answer what you would do when you've been blindfolded from knowing like 93% of the information that you would realistically take into account? You probably wouldn't have an answer in one minute like the interviewer is expecting; you would probably ask the opinion of your chief of staff, vice president, senior adviser, the Pentagon Joint Chiefs of Staff, and then think about the issue for 80 hours. Many economic situations are multi-faceted, and an intervention in one area likely has downstream consequences, which is why you might not want to speak on an economic hypothetical without the full context of local conditions (maybe your intervention causes inflation to rise. Is the inflation rate comfortably low or dangerously close to hyperinflation?) and causes (are the students doing bad because of poverty, absent parents, bad teachers, underfunded schools, or badly designed standards? Your solution can't be agnostic of the cause). In a state governments vs federal government hypothetical, it is likely that the federal government will fall more in the center of a position, whereas state laws will likely fall further on both extremes, and you can likely contradict your own party platform if you start weighing-in on whether you would endorse states deciding for themselves (e.g. should a Republican say that they approve of individual states deciding to expand abortion availability?).
- Hypotheticals can take place within an impossible reality. Some hypothetical discussions give you a certain premise, but they also included other bundled assumptions that could not concurrently exist in reality, i.e. a paradox. It could be a sort of perfect storm concocted as a gotcha. "What if you raise taxes on highly profitable corporations and it causes federal revenue to go way down?" "What if you pass more anti-poverty measures and poverty goes up?" "What if a stateless territory with no government had a better educated populace than us? Would you consider eliminating public education then?" You should not accept the premise of a question if it is both impossible to exist in reality and also constructed to make you appear wrong no matter what.
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Because what you think you might do in a hypothetical situation may turn out to be quite different to what you would actually do if that hypothetical situation were to come to pass.
Hence most politicians refuse to be answer when asked such questions, for fear that, if the hypothetical situation does one day occur, what they do may contradict what they said they would do - leading to accusations of hypocrisy, etc.
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Political interviews are adversarial situations: the interviewer doesn't want their program to be just a boring a political advert, so they try to add drama by asking hard questions in the hope of catching the politician out. Politicians learn how to play this game out of self defence.
The hypothetical question is move by the interviewer in this game. It allows the interviewer to posit a situation in which the politician must choose between two alternatives, either of which looks very bad.
For instance, if a politician is strongly against raising taxes the interviewer might ask "What if we were about to default on our debt?" If the politician replies "Never raise taxes" then they appear to be willing to countenance a default, which will weaken confidence in government finances and likely cause the government to have to pay extra for its loans. On the other hand if they say "Well, I guess we'd have to raise our taxes then." they appear indecisive and are likely to lose votes from people who oppose tax rises. Either way the politician has lost points, so the best counter-move is not to answer.
I've down voted this answer because of the broadness of the hypothetical question. Asking a federal politician, the question doesn't apply because the US Federal Government can't default on debt; they'd be required to restructure spending. Asked of a state or local politician, the question has stronger viability.
– Drunk Cynic
9 hours ago
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There are a few reasons why.
The first would be that a hypothetical question usually deals with just that, an imaginary situation. Where real life deals with nuance, complexities and multi-variate factors, a hypothetical question is usually unrealistically black and white. Answering a question about something that would not happen, at least in the way it is framed, tells us nothing, so the politician risks having an unrealistic scenario define him or her in a way that they would probably deem to be unfair.
Usually, when a situation like that is posed, it's regarding a contested subject. While someone may agree with a politician 80% of the time, and the 20% of the time are on issues that happen infrequently or don't really impact their lives, the airwaves are filled with ads around election time hammering opponents on single, absurd issues on trivial matters that are blown up to be huge moral shortcomings, according to the ads. For the most part, still, when dealing with an uninformed electorate (in the USA, at least), the average voter is either too dim or too lazy to see the crass manipulation that goes into attack ads. That's why attack ads work. For anything that can be used to attack a politician, they are going to avoid going on the record in speech or action, until they absolutely have to, in order to deal with actual votes or legislation or to react to issues of the day. They certainly aren't going to paint a bulls-eye on themselves for a situation that is made up, if they can help it.
Finally, the politicians have little control over the situation when someone else makes up a scenario and sets the parameters for what they consider to be a response. US politicians, aware of how much 30 second ads define them, either by themselves or opposition, are PR-managed to the point of being automatons. They repeat the same meaningless slogans and catch-phrases that tested well in focus groups, and that matches with the slick advertising campaigns, their own and via "dark money" groups that they are illegally coordinating with. To respond to something outside their scripted narrative is to cede control in a way that could hurt their message.
None of this speaks well to the current state of US election campaigns. That's because it it is a cesspool, with expected results. I'm not sure how much these factors are true and how much politicians avoid saying anything, and get away with it, in nations that don't have billions in outside money and donations being spent in a perpetual election cycle, so, if someone is looking at it from a non-USA perspective, "your results may vary."
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5 Answers
5
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oldest
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5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
7
down vote
Not answering hypothetical questions is basic politics. There is nothing to gain in answering them. If you are running for political office (or even getting a promotion in your job) you should realize that any interview is about expressing your own agenda. Often your agenda is at odds with the interviewer's agenda.
There are several techniques that a veteran reporter will use to trip up a politician. For example the "negative statement without a question": "Many people think you are a terrible person"; the "assumption question": "Have you stopped being a terrible person?". These are combined into the "hypothetical situation where the conclusion is negative": "What would you do in situation X since you are a terrible person"
Only the beginner politician will attempt to answer any of those with "I'm not a terrible person". The correct answer and the one that shows you can lead is: "I am going to tell you about my agenda now"
However, even veteran politicians will fall for the interviewer's tricks. One example that comes to mind is George Stephonapolous Asking Presidential candidate Mitt Romney: Do you think the state have the right to ban contraceptives? After repeated backs and forth Mitt Admitted that they possibly could if they wanted to. After that Romney became the candidate that wants to ban contraceptives. People still remember that, but have no idea what his agenda was.
George Mitt Interview
2
What you call a "trick" is someone's effort to get an actual answer from a political figure.
– jeffronicus
11 hours ago
2
@jeffronicus it's both. As the politicians have learned to not answer, journalists learned to "trick" politicians into answering.
– Caleth
10 hours ago
1
The example question actually seems like a fairly legitimate question for a politician and the kind of thing that voters actually do need to know, vs hypothetical question. It's not a made up scenario vs asking about the politician's political beliefs and philosophies. I think the answer has some legitimate points about answering a hypothetical, but the example doesn't serve the question well. Not a down-vote or anything, more of a "you had me until...."
– PoloHoleSet
10 hours ago
George HW Bush being asked to declare that he would or would not ever raise taxes would probably be a better hypothetical example, IMO, or the Dukakis "would you still be against the death penalty if your wife was raped and murdered" hypothetical.
– PoloHoleSet
9 hours ago
@PoloHoleSet, I want to assure you that my point is academic. The battle between an interviewer and the interviewee is what makes media interesting. Who will prevail is exciting to the audience and makes or breaks the career of the interviewer. I hope it never changes
– Frank Cedeno
8 hours ago
|
show 3 more comments
up vote
7
down vote
Not answering hypothetical questions is basic politics. There is nothing to gain in answering them. If you are running for political office (or even getting a promotion in your job) you should realize that any interview is about expressing your own agenda. Often your agenda is at odds with the interviewer's agenda.
There are several techniques that a veteran reporter will use to trip up a politician. For example the "negative statement without a question": "Many people think you are a terrible person"; the "assumption question": "Have you stopped being a terrible person?". These are combined into the "hypothetical situation where the conclusion is negative": "What would you do in situation X since you are a terrible person"
Only the beginner politician will attempt to answer any of those with "I'm not a terrible person". The correct answer and the one that shows you can lead is: "I am going to tell you about my agenda now"
However, even veteran politicians will fall for the interviewer's tricks. One example that comes to mind is George Stephonapolous Asking Presidential candidate Mitt Romney: Do you think the state have the right to ban contraceptives? After repeated backs and forth Mitt Admitted that they possibly could if they wanted to. After that Romney became the candidate that wants to ban contraceptives. People still remember that, but have no idea what his agenda was.
George Mitt Interview
2
What you call a "trick" is someone's effort to get an actual answer from a political figure.
– jeffronicus
11 hours ago
2
@jeffronicus it's both. As the politicians have learned to not answer, journalists learned to "trick" politicians into answering.
– Caleth
10 hours ago
1
The example question actually seems like a fairly legitimate question for a politician and the kind of thing that voters actually do need to know, vs hypothetical question. It's not a made up scenario vs asking about the politician's political beliefs and philosophies. I think the answer has some legitimate points about answering a hypothetical, but the example doesn't serve the question well. Not a down-vote or anything, more of a "you had me until...."
– PoloHoleSet
10 hours ago
George HW Bush being asked to declare that he would or would not ever raise taxes would probably be a better hypothetical example, IMO, or the Dukakis "would you still be against the death penalty if your wife was raped and murdered" hypothetical.
– PoloHoleSet
9 hours ago
@PoloHoleSet, I want to assure you that my point is academic. The battle between an interviewer and the interviewee is what makes media interesting. Who will prevail is exciting to the audience and makes or breaks the career of the interviewer. I hope it never changes
– Frank Cedeno
8 hours ago
|
show 3 more comments
up vote
7
down vote
up vote
7
down vote
Not answering hypothetical questions is basic politics. There is nothing to gain in answering them. If you are running for political office (or even getting a promotion in your job) you should realize that any interview is about expressing your own agenda. Often your agenda is at odds with the interviewer's agenda.
There are several techniques that a veteran reporter will use to trip up a politician. For example the "negative statement without a question": "Many people think you are a terrible person"; the "assumption question": "Have you stopped being a terrible person?". These are combined into the "hypothetical situation where the conclusion is negative": "What would you do in situation X since you are a terrible person"
Only the beginner politician will attempt to answer any of those with "I'm not a terrible person". The correct answer and the one that shows you can lead is: "I am going to tell you about my agenda now"
However, even veteran politicians will fall for the interviewer's tricks. One example that comes to mind is George Stephonapolous Asking Presidential candidate Mitt Romney: Do you think the state have the right to ban contraceptives? After repeated backs and forth Mitt Admitted that they possibly could if they wanted to. After that Romney became the candidate that wants to ban contraceptives. People still remember that, but have no idea what his agenda was.
George Mitt Interview
Not answering hypothetical questions is basic politics. There is nothing to gain in answering them. If you are running for political office (or even getting a promotion in your job) you should realize that any interview is about expressing your own agenda. Often your agenda is at odds with the interviewer's agenda.
There are several techniques that a veteran reporter will use to trip up a politician. For example the "negative statement without a question": "Many people think you are a terrible person"; the "assumption question": "Have you stopped being a terrible person?". These are combined into the "hypothetical situation where the conclusion is negative": "What would you do in situation X since you are a terrible person"
Only the beginner politician will attempt to answer any of those with "I'm not a terrible person". The correct answer and the one that shows you can lead is: "I am going to tell you about my agenda now"
However, even veteran politicians will fall for the interviewer's tricks. One example that comes to mind is George Stephonapolous Asking Presidential candidate Mitt Romney: Do you think the state have the right to ban contraceptives? After repeated backs and forth Mitt Admitted that they possibly could if they wanted to. After that Romney became the candidate that wants to ban contraceptives. People still remember that, but have no idea what his agenda was.
George Mitt Interview
answered 12 hours ago
Frank Cedeno
2,2461619
2,2461619
2
What you call a "trick" is someone's effort to get an actual answer from a political figure.
– jeffronicus
11 hours ago
2
@jeffronicus it's both. As the politicians have learned to not answer, journalists learned to "trick" politicians into answering.
– Caleth
10 hours ago
1
The example question actually seems like a fairly legitimate question for a politician and the kind of thing that voters actually do need to know, vs hypothetical question. It's not a made up scenario vs asking about the politician's political beliefs and philosophies. I think the answer has some legitimate points about answering a hypothetical, but the example doesn't serve the question well. Not a down-vote or anything, more of a "you had me until...."
– PoloHoleSet
10 hours ago
George HW Bush being asked to declare that he would or would not ever raise taxes would probably be a better hypothetical example, IMO, or the Dukakis "would you still be against the death penalty if your wife was raped and murdered" hypothetical.
– PoloHoleSet
9 hours ago
@PoloHoleSet, I want to assure you that my point is academic. The battle between an interviewer and the interviewee is what makes media interesting. Who will prevail is exciting to the audience and makes or breaks the career of the interviewer. I hope it never changes
– Frank Cedeno
8 hours ago
|
show 3 more comments
2
What you call a "trick" is someone's effort to get an actual answer from a political figure.
– jeffronicus
11 hours ago
2
@jeffronicus it's both. As the politicians have learned to not answer, journalists learned to "trick" politicians into answering.
– Caleth
10 hours ago
1
The example question actually seems like a fairly legitimate question for a politician and the kind of thing that voters actually do need to know, vs hypothetical question. It's not a made up scenario vs asking about the politician's political beliefs and philosophies. I think the answer has some legitimate points about answering a hypothetical, but the example doesn't serve the question well. Not a down-vote or anything, more of a "you had me until...."
– PoloHoleSet
10 hours ago
George HW Bush being asked to declare that he would or would not ever raise taxes would probably be a better hypothetical example, IMO, or the Dukakis "would you still be against the death penalty if your wife was raped and murdered" hypothetical.
– PoloHoleSet
9 hours ago
@PoloHoleSet, I want to assure you that my point is academic. The battle between an interviewer and the interviewee is what makes media interesting. Who will prevail is exciting to the audience and makes or breaks the career of the interviewer. I hope it never changes
– Frank Cedeno
8 hours ago
2
2
What you call a "trick" is someone's effort to get an actual answer from a political figure.
– jeffronicus
11 hours ago
What you call a "trick" is someone's effort to get an actual answer from a political figure.
– jeffronicus
11 hours ago
2
2
@jeffronicus it's both. As the politicians have learned to not answer, journalists learned to "trick" politicians into answering.
– Caleth
10 hours ago
@jeffronicus it's both. As the politicians have learned to not answer, journalists learned to "trick" politicians into answering.
– Caleth
10 hours ago
1
1
The example question actually seems like a fairly legitimate question for a politician and the kind of thing that voters actually do need to know, vs hypothetical question. It's not a made up scenario vs asking about the politician's political beliefs and philosophies. I think the answer has some legitimate points about answering a hypothetical, but the example doesn't serve the question well. Not a down-vote or anything, more of a "you had me until...."
– PoloHoleSet
10 hours ago
The example question actually seems like a fairly legitimate question for a politician and the kind of thing that voters actually do need to know, vs hypothetical question. It's not a made up scenario vs asking about the politician's political beliefs and philosophies. I think the answer has some legitimate points about answering a hypothetical, but the example doesn't serve the question well. Not a down-vote or anything, more of a "you had me until...."
– PoloHoleSet
10 hours ago
George HW Bush being asked to declare that he would or would not ever raise taxes would probably be a better hypothetical example, IMO, or the Dukakis "would you still be against the death penalty if your wife was raped and murdered" hypothetical.
– PoloHoleSet
9 hours ago
George HW Bush being asked to declare that he would or would not ever raise taxes would probably be a better hypothetical example, IMO, or the Dukakis "would you still be against the death penalty if your wife was raped and murdered" hypothetical.
– PoloHoleSet
9 hours ago
@PoloHoleSet, I want to assure you that my point is academic. The battle between an interviewer and the interviewee is what makes media interesting. Who will prevail is exciting to the audience and makes or breaks the career of the interviewer. I hope it never changes
– Frank Cedeno
8 hours ago
@PoloHoleSet, I want to assure you that my point is academic. The battle between an interviewer and the interviewee is what makes media interesting. Who will prevail is exciting to the audience and makes or breaks the career of the interviewer. I hope it never changes
– Frank Cedeno
8 hours ago
|
show 3 more comments
up vote
5
down vote
The vast majority of the time, a politician's negatives come from what they have said, not what they haven't said. A politician can refuse to answer questions a thousand times without it hurting their career. Anything a politician does say, even if it is reasonable, can be taken out of context, treated as an incorrect response when it is a fine response, replayed in an attack ad over spooky music with ominous narration, later misquoted, and treated as a sufficient reason not to vote for that politician even though it is such a small part of their platform (or not even part of their platform at all).
The following are not examples of responses to hypothetical questions, but they are examples of how twisted quotes have been career-damaging and carried more weight than they should.
Example: famously, Al Gore is misquoted as claiming that he invented the internet, which he did not exactly claim, especially in those words; though he did credit himself with advancing the adoption of the internet in many ways, including the Supercomputer Network Study Act of 1986, the High Performance Computing and Communication Act of 1991, and other measures.
Example: Stacey Abrams gave a speech suggesting that the blue wave includes immigrants, documented and undocumented. It is obvious that she would not have meant that undocumented immigrants actually vote in the mid-terms (no politician would be dumb enough to say and mean this in a public forum), but that undocumented immigrants support the blue wave (in non-voting ways, including moral support and advocacy) and are supported by the blue wave. But some people deliberately misinterpreted this quote in order to claim that she was encouraging voter fraud.
Hypothetical questions in particular have several other factors that make them politically dangerous to tackle:
- They exist outside of the politician's message. If a politician wants voters to associate them with healthcare reform, then they don't want to answer a hypothetical that could lead to them being associate with a different topic.
- Hypotheticals exist outside of planned responses. This means whatever answer the politician gives will not be premeditated, does not give the benefit of conducting any background research, and therefore, the response is more likely to be wrong.
- It also means that the politician has to formulate an answer without assistance from strategy consultants, the policy director, the communications department, and so on.
- It is not a practiced answer, and therefore more likely to be delivered nervously, ineptly, and with gaffes.
- Hypotheticals lack the full context of the situation. If you are asked how you would handle a foreign country killing an American journalist, in real life you might take into account things like what is our diplomatic relationship with the country, what is our trade relationship with the country, what is the relative military strength between us and them, who within that country perpetrated the killing, why did they do it, who else knew, who authorized it, and so on. In a hypothetical, a lot of this context is obscured; so how are you supposed to answer what you would do when you've been blindfolded from knowing like 93% of the information that you would realistically take into account? You probably wouldn't have an answer in one minute like the interviewer is expecting; you would probably ask the opinion of your chief of staff, vice president, senior adviser, the Pentagon Joint Chiefs of Staff, and then think about the issue for 80 hours. Many economic situations are multi-faceted, and an intervention in one area likely has downstream consequences, which is why you might not want to speak on an economic hypothetical without the full context of local conditions (maybe your intervention causes inflation to rise. Is the inflation rate comfortably low or dangerously close to hyperinflation?) and causes (are the students doing bad because of poverty, absent parents, bad teachers, underfunded schools, or badly designed standards? Your solution can't be agnostic of the cause). In a state governments vs federal government hypothetical, it is likely that the federal government will fall more in the center of a position, whereas state laws will likely fall further on both extremes, and you can likely contradict your own party platform if you start weighing-in on whether you would endorse states deciding for themselves (e.g. should a Republican say that they approve of individual states deciding to expand abortion availability?).
- Hypotheticals can take place within an impossible reality. Some hypothetical discussions give you a certain premise, but they also included other bundled assumptions that could not concurrently exist in reality, i.e. a paradox. It could be a sort of perfect storm concocted as a gotcha. "What if you raise taxes on highly profitable corporations and it causes federal revenue to go way down?" "What if you pass more anti-poverty measures and poverty goes up?" "What if a stateless territory with no government had a better educated populace than us? Would you consider eliminating public education then?" You should not accept the premise of a question if it is both impossible to exist in reality and also constructed to make you appear wrong no matter what.
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up vote
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The vast majority of the time, a politician's negatives come from what they have said, not what they haven't said. A politician can refuse to answer questions a thousand times without it hurting their career. Anything a politician does say, even if it is reasonable, can be taken out of context, treated as an incorrect response when it is a fine response, replayed in an attack ad over spooky music with ominous narration, later misquoted, and treated as a sufficient reason not to vote for that politician even though it is such a small part of their platform (or not even part of their platform at all).
The following are not examples of responses to hypothetical questions, but they are examples of how twisted quotes have been career-damaging and carried more weight than they should.
Example: famously, Al Gore is misquoted as claiming that he invented the internet, which he did not exactly claim, especially in those words; though he did credit himself with advancing the adoption of the internet in many ways, including the Supercomputer Network Study Act of 1986, the High Performance Computing and Communication Act of 1991, and other measures.
Example: Stacey Abrams gave a speech suggesting that the blue wave includes immigrants, documented and undocumented. It is obvious that she would not have meant that undocumented immigrants actually vote in the mid-terms (no politician would be dumb enough to say and mean this in a public forum), but that undocumented immigrants support the blue wave (in non-voting ways, including moral support and advocacy) and are supported by the blue wave. But some people deliberately misinterpreted this quote in order to claim that she was encouraging voter fraud.
Hypothetical questions in particular have several other factors that make them politically dangerous to tackle:
- They exist outside of the politician's message. If a politician wants voters to associate them with healthcare reform, then they don't want to answer a hypothetical that could lead to them being associate with a different topic.
- Hypotheticals exist outside of planned responses. This means whatever answer the politician gives will not be premeditated, does not give the benefit of conducting any background research, and therefore, the response is more likely to be wrong.
- It also means that the politician has to formulate an answer without assistance from strategy consultants, the policy director, the communications department, and so on.
- It is not a practiced answer, and therefore more likely to be delivered nervously, ineptly, and with gaffes.
- Hypotheticals lack the full context of the situation. If you are asked how you would handle a foreign country killing an American journalist, in real life you might take into account things like what is our diplomatic relationship with the country, what is our trade relationship with the country, what is the relative military strength between us and them, who within that country perpetrated the killing, why did they do it, who else knew, who authorized it, and so on. In a hypothetical, a lot of this context is obscured; so how are you supposed to answer what you would do when you've been blindfolded from knowing like 93% of the information that you would realistically take into account? You probably wouldn't have an answer in one minute like the interviewer is expecting; you would probably ask the opinion of your chief of staff, vice president, senior adviser, the Pentagon Joint Chiefs of Staff, and then think about the issue for 80 hours. Many economic situations are multi-faceted, and an intervention in one area likely has downstream consequences, which is why you might not want to speak on an economic hypothetical without the full context of local conditions (maybe your intervention causes inflation to rise. Is the inflation rate comfortably low or dangerously close to hyperinflation?) and causes (are the students doing bad because of poverty, absent parents, bad teachers, underfunded schools, or badly designed standards? Your solution can't be agnostic of the cause). In a state governments vs federal government hypothetical, it is likely that the federal government will fall more in the center of a position, whereas state laws will likely fall further on both extremes, and you can likely contradict your own party platform if you start weighing-in on whether you would endorse states deciding for themselves (e.g. should a Republican say that they approve of individual states deciding to expand abortion availability?).
- Hypotheticals can take place within an impossible reality. Some hypothetical discussions give you a certain premise, but they also included other bundled assumptions that could not concurrently exist in reality, i.e. a paradox. It could be a sort of perfect storm concocted as a gotcha. "What if you raise taxes on highly profitable corporations and it causes federal revenue to go way down?" "What if you pass more anti-poverty measures and poverty goes up?" "What if a stateless territory with no government had a better educated populace than us? Would you consider eliminating public education then?" You should not accept the premise of a question if it is both impossible to exist in reality and also constructed to make you appear wrong no matter what.
add a comment |
up vote
5
down vote
up vote
5
down vote
The vast majority of the time, a politician's negatives come from what they have said, not what they haven't said. A politician can refuse to answer questions a thousand times without it hurting their career. Anything a politician does say, even if it is reasonable, can be taken out of context, treated as an incorrect response when it is a fine response, replayed in an attack ad over spooky music with ominous narration, later misquoted, and treated as a sufficient reason not to vote for that politician even though it is such a small part of their platform (or not even part of their platform at all).
The following are not examples of responses to hypothetical questions, but they are examples of how twisted quotes have been career-damaging and carried more weight than they should.
Example: famously, Al Gore is misquoted as claiming that he invented the internet, which he did not exactly claim, especially in those words; though he did credit himself with advancing the adoption of the internet in many ways, including the Supercomputer Network Study Act of 1986, the High Performance Computing and Communication Act of 1991, and other measures.
Example: Stacey Abrams gave a speech suggesting that the blue wave includes immigrants, documented and undocumented. It is obvious that she would not have meant that undocumented immigrants actually vote in the mid-terms (no politician would be dumb enough to say and mean this in a public forum), but that undocumented immigrants support the blue wave (in non-voting ways, including moral support and advocacy) and are supported by the blue wave. But some people deliberately misinterpreted this quote in order to claim that she was encouraging voter fraud.
Hypothetical questions in particular have several other factors that make them politically dangerous to tackle:
- They exist outside of the politician's message. If a politician wants voters to associate them with healthcare reform, then they don't want to answer a hypothetical that could lead to them being associate with a different topic.
- Hypotheticals exist outside of planned responses. This means whatever answer the politician gives will not be premeditated, does not give the benefit of conducting any background research, and therefore, the response is more likely to be wrong.
- It also means that the politician has to formulate an answer without assistance from strategy consultants, the policy director, the communications department, and so on.
- It is not a practiced answer, and therefore more likely to be delivered nervously, ineptly, and with gaffes.
- Hypotheticals lack the full context of the situation. If you are asked how you would handle a foreign country killing an American journalist, in real life you might take into account things like what is our diplomatic relationship with the country, what is our trade relationship with the country, what is the relative military strength between us and them, who within that country perpetrated the killing, why did they do it, who else knew, who authorized it, and so on. In a hypothetical, a lot of this context is obscured; so how are you supposed to answer what you would do when you've been blindfolded from knowing like 93% of the information that you would realistically take into account? You probably wouldn't have an answer in one minute like the interviewer is expecting; you would probably ask the opinion of your chief of staff, vice president, senior adviser, the Pentagon Joint Chiefs of Staff, and then think about the issue for 80 hours. Many economic situations are multi-faceted, and an intervention in one area likely has downstream consequences, which is why you might not want to speak on an economic hypothetical without the full context of local conditions (maybe your intervention causes inflation to rise. Is the inflation rate comfortably low or dangerously close to hyperinflation?) and causes (are the students doing bad because of poverty, absent parents, bad teachers, underfunded schools, or badly designed standards? Your solution can't be agnostic of the cause). In a state governments vs federal government hypothetical, it is likely that the federal government will fall more in the center of a position, whereas state laws will likely fall further on both extremes, and you can likely contradict your own party platform if you start weighing-in on whether you would endorse states deciding for themselves (e.g. should a Republican say that they approve of individual states deciding to expand abortion availability?).
- Hypotheticals can take place within an impossible reality. Some hypothetical discussions give you a certain premise, but they also included other bundled assumptions that could not concurrently exist in reality, i.e. a paradox. It could be a sort of perfect storm concocted as a gotcha. "What if you raise taxes on highly profitable corporations and it causes federal revenue to go way down?" "What if you pass more anti-poverty measures and poverty goes up?" "What if a stateless territory with no government had a better educated populace than us? Would you consider eliminating public education then?" You should not accept the premise of a question if it is both impossible to exist in reality and also constructed to make you appear wrong no matter what.
The vast majority of the time, a politician's negatives come from what they have said, not what they haven't said. A politician can refuse to answer questions a thousand times without it hurting their career. Anything a politician does say, even if it is reasonable, can be taken out of context, treated as an incorrect response when it is a fine response, replayed in an attack ad over spooky music with ominous narration, later misquoted, and treated as a sufficient reason not to vote for that politician even though it is such a small part of their platform (or not even part of their platform at all).
The following are not examples of responses to hypothetical questions, but they are examples of how twisted quotes have been career-damaging and carried more weight than they should.
Example: famously, Al Gore is misquoted as claiming that he invented the internet, which he did not exactly claim, especially in those words; though he did credit himself with advancing the adoption of the internet in many ways, including the Supercomputer Network Study Act of 1986, the High Performance Computing and Communication Act of 1991, and other measures.
Example: Stacey Abrams gave a speech suggesting that the blue wave includes immigrants, documented and undocumented. It is obvious that she would not have meant that undocumented immigrants actually vote in the mid-terms (no politician would be dumb enough to say and mean this in a public forum), but that undocumented immigrants support the blue wave (in non-voting ways, including moral support and advocacy) and are supported by the blue wave. But some people deliberately misinterpreted this quote in order to claim that she was encouraging voter fraud.
Hypothetical questions in particular have several other factors that make them politically dangerous to tackle:
- They exist outside of the politician's message. If a politician wants voters to associate them with healthcare reform, then they don't want to answer a hypothetical that could lead to them being associate with a different topic.
- Hypotheticals exist outside of planned responses. This means whatever answer the politician gives will not be premeditated, does not give the benefit of conducting any background research, and therefore, the response is more likely to be wrong.
- It also means that the politician has to formulate an answer without assistance from strategy consultants, the policy director, the communications department, and so on.
- It is not a practiced answer, and therefore more likely to be delivered nervously, ineptly, and with gaffes.
- Hypotheticals lack the full context of the situation. If you are asked how you would handle a foreign country killing an American journalist, in real life you might take into account things like what is our diplomatic relationship with the country, what is our trade relationship with the country, what is the relative military strength between us and them, who within that country perpetrated the killing, why did they do it, who else knew, who authorized it, and so on. In a hypothetical, a lot of this context is obscured; so how are you supposed to answer what you would do when you've been blindfolded from knowing like 93% of the information that you would realistically take into account? You probably wouldn't have an answer in one minute like the interviewer is expecting; you would probably ask the opinion of your chief of staff, vice president, senior adviser, the Pentagon Joint Chiefs of Staff, and then think about the issue for 80 hours. Many economic situations are multi-faceted, and an intervention in one area likely has downstream consequences, which is why you might not want to speak on an economic hypothetical without the full context of local conditions (maybe your intervention causes inflation to rise. Is the inflation rate comfortably low or dangerously close to hyperinflation?) and causes (are the students doing bad because of poverty, absent parents, bad teachers, underfunded schools, or badly designed standards? Your solution can't be agnostic of the cause). In a state governments vs federal government hypothetical, it is likely that the federal government will fall more in the center of a position, whereas state laws will likely fall further on both extremes, and you can likely contradict your own party platform if you start weighing-in on whether you would endorse states deciding for themselves (e.g. should a Republican say that they approve of individual states deciding to expand abortion availability?).
- Hypotheticals can take place within an impossible reality. Some hypothetical discussions give you a certain premise, but they also included other bundled assumptions that could not concurrently exist in reality, i.e. a paradox. It could be a sort of perfect storm concocted as a gotcha. "What if you raise taxes on highly profitable corporations and it causes federal revenue to go way down?" "What if you pass more anti-poverty measures and poverty goes up?" "What if a stateless territory with no government had a better educated populace than us? Would you consider eliminating public education then?" You should not accept the premise of a question if it is both impossible to exist in reality and also constructed to make you appear wrong no matter what.
edited 6 hours ago
answered 8 hours ago
John
1,783218
1,783218
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Because what you think you might do in a hypothetical situation may turn out to be quite different to what you would actually do if that hypothetical situation were to come to pass.
Hence most politicians refuse to be answer when asked such questions, for fear that, if the hypothetical situation does one day occur, what they do may contradict what they said they would do - leading to accusations of hypocrisy, etc.
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Because what you think you might do in a hypothetical situation may turn out to be quite different to what you would actually do if that hypothetical situation were to come to pass.
Hence most politicians refuse to be answer when asked such questions, for fear that, if the hypothetical situation does one day occur, what they do may contradict what they said they would do - leading to accusations of hypocrisy, etc.
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up vote
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up vote
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Because what you think you might do in a hypothetical situation may turn out to be quite different to what you would actually do if that hypothetical situation were to come to pass.
Hence most politicians refuse to be answer when asked such questions, for fear that, if the hypothetical situation does one day occur, what they do may contradict what they said they would do - leading to accusations of hypocrisy, etc.
Because what you think you might do in a hypothetical situation may turn out to be quite different to what you would actually do if that hypothetical situation were to come to pass.
Hence most politicians refuse to be answer when asked such questions, for fear that, if the hypothetical situation does one day occur, what they do may contradict what they said they would do - leading to accusations of hypocrisy, etc.
answered 12 hours ago
Steve Melnikoff
3,2671330
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Political interviews are adversarial situations: the interviewer doesn't want their program to be just a boring a political advert, so they try to add drama by asking hard questions in the hope of catching the politician out. Politicians learn how to play this game out of self defence.
The hypothetical question is move by the interviewer in this game. It allows the interviewer to posit a situation in which the politician must choose between two alternatives, either of which looks very bad.
For instance, if a politician is strongly against raising taxes the interviewer might ask "What if we were about to default on our debt?" If the politician replies "Never raise taxes" then they appear to be willing to countenance a default, which will weaken confidence in government finances and likely cause the government to have to pay extra for its loans. On the other hand if they say "Well, I guess we'd have to raise our taxes then." they appear indecisive and are likely to lose votes from people who oppose tax rises. Either way the politician has lost points, so the best counter-move is not to answer.
I've down voted this answer because of the broadness of the hypothetical question. Asking a federal politician, the question doesn't apply because the US Federal Government can't default on debt; they'd be required to restructure spending. Asked of a state or local politician, the question has stronger viability.
– Drunk Cynic
9 hours ago
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
Political interviews are adversarial situations: the interviewer doesn't want their program to be just a boring a political advert, so they try to add drama by asking hard questions in the hope of catching the politician out. Politicians learn how to play this game out of self defence.
The hypothetical question is move by the interviewer in this game. It allows the interviewer to posit a situation in which the politician must choose between two alternatives, either of which looks very bad.
For instance, if a politician is strongly against raising taxes the interviewer might ask "What if we were about to default on our debt?" If the politician replies "Never raise taxes" then they appear to be willing to countenance a default, which will weaken confidence in government finances and likely cause the government to have to pay extra for its loans. On the other hand if they say "Well, I guess we'd have to raise our taxes then." they appear indecisive and are likely to lose votes from people who oppose tax rises. Either way the politician has lost points, so the best counter-move is not to answer.
I've down voted this answer because of the broadness of the hypothetical question. Asking a federal politician, the question doesn't apply because the US Federal Government can't default on debt; they'd be required to restructure spending. Asked of a state or local politician, the question has stronger viability.
– Drunk Cynic
9 hours ago
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
up vote
2
down vote
Political interviews are adversarial situations: the interviewer doesn't want their program to be just a boring a political advert, so they try to add drama by asking hard questions in the hope of catching the politician out. Politicians learn how to play this game out of self defence.
The hypothetical question is move by the interviewer in this game. It allows the interviewer to posit a situation in which the politician must choose between two alternatives, either of which looks very bad.
For instance, if a politician is strongly against raising taxes the interviewer might ask "What if we were about to default on our debt?" If the politician replies "Never raise taxes" then they appear to be willing to countenance a default, which will weaken confidence in government finances and likely cause the government to have to pay extra for its loans. On the other hand if they say "Well, I guess we'd have to raise our taxes then." they appear indecisive and are likely to lose votes from people who oppose tax rises. Either way the politician has lost points, so the best counter-move is not to answer.
Political interviews are adversarial situations: the interviewer doesn't want their program to be just a boring a political advert, so they try to add drama by asking hard questions in the hope of catching the politician out. Politicians learn how to play this game out of self defence.
The hypothetical question is move by the interviewer in this game. It allows the interviewer to posit a situation in which the politician must choose between two alternatives, either of which looks very bad.
For instance, if a politician is strongly against raising taxes the interviewer might ask "What if we were about to default on our debt?" If the politician replies "Never raise taxes" then they appear to be willing to countenance a default, which will weaken confidence in government finances and likely cause the government to have to pay extra for its loans. On the other hand if they say "Well, I guess we'd have to raise our taxes then." they appear indecisive and are likely to lose votes from people who oppose tax rises. Either way the politician has lost points, so the best counter-move is not to answer.
answered 11 hours ago
Paul Johnson
5,54231527
5,54231527
I've down voted this answer because of the broadness of the hypothetical question. Asking a federal politician, the question doesn't apply because the US Federal Government can't default on debt; they'd be required to restructure spending. Asked of a state or local politician, the question has stronger viability.
– Drunk Cynic
9 hours ago
add a comment |
I've down voted this answer because of the broadness of the hypothetical question. Asking a federal politician, the question doesn't apply because the US Federal Government can't default on debt; they'd be required to restructure spending. Asked of a state or local politician, the question has stronger viability.
– Drunk Cynic
9 hours ago
I've down voted this answer because of the broadness of the hypothetical question. Asking a federal politician, the question doesn't apply because the US Federal Government can't default on debt; they'd be required to restructure spending. Asked of a state or local politician, the question has stronger viability.
– Drunk Cynic
9 hours ago
I've down voted this answer because of the broadness of the hypothetical question. Asking a federal politician, the question doesn't apply because the US Federal Government can't default on debt; they'd be required to restructure spending. Asked of a state or local politician, the question has stronger viability.
– Drunk Cynic
9 hours ago
add a comment |
up vote
1
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There are a few reasons why.
The first would be that a hypothetical question usually deals with just that, an imaginary situation. Where real life deals with nuance, complexities and multi-variate factors, a hypothetical question is usually unrealistically black and white. Answering a question about something that would not happen, at least in the way it is framed, tells us nothing, so the politician risks having an unrealistic scenario define him or her in a way that they would probably deem to be unfair.
Usually, when a situation like that is posed, it's regarding a contested subject. While someone may agree with a politician 80% of the time, and the 20% of the time are on issues that happen infrequently or don't really impact their lives, the airwaves are filled with ads around election time hammering opponents on single, absurd issues on trivial matters that are blown up to be huge moral shortcomings, according to the ads. For the most part, still, when dealing with an uninformed electorate (in the USA, at least), the average voter is either too dim or too lazy to see the crass manipulation that goes into attack ads. That's why attack ads work. For anything that can be used to attack a politician, they are going to avoid going on the record in speech or action, until they absolutely have to, in order to deal with actual votes or legislation or to react to issues of the day. They certainly aren't going to paint a bulls-eye on themselves for a situation that is made up, if they can help it.
Finally, the politicians have little control over the situation when someone else makes up a scenario and sets the parameters for what they consider to be a response. US politicians, aware of how much 30 second ads define them, either by themselves or opposition, are PR-managed to the point of being automatons. They repeat the same meaningless slogans and catch-phrases that tested well in focus groups, and that matches with the slick advertising campaigns, their own and via "dark money" groups that they are illegally coordinating with. To respond to something outside their scripted narrative is to cede control in a way that could hurt their message.
None of this speaks well to the current state of US election campaigns. That's because it it is a cesspool, with expected results. I'm not sure how much these factors are true and how much politicians avoid saying anything, and get away with it, in nations that don't have billions in outside money and donations being spent in a perpetual election cycle, so, if someone is looking at it from a non-USA perspective, "your results may vary."
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
There are a few reasons why.
The first would be that a hypothetical question usually deals with just that, an imaginary situation. Where real life deals with nuance, complexities and multi-variate factors, a hypothetical question is usually unrealistically black and white. Answering a question about something that would not happen, at least in the way it is framed, tells us nothing, so the politician risks having an unrealistic scenario define him or her in a way that they would probably deem to be unfair.
Usually, when a situation like that is posed, it's regarding a contested subject. While someone may agree with a politician 80% of the time, and the 20% of the time are on issues that happen infrequently or don't really impact their lives, the airwaves are filled with ads around election time hammering opponents on single, absurd issues on trivial matters that are blown up to be huge moral shortcomings, according to the ads. For the most part, still, when dealing with an uninformed electorate (in the USA, at least), the average voter is either too dim or too lazy to see the crass manipulation that goes into attack ads. That's why attack ads work. For anything that can be used to attack a politician, they are going to avoid going on the record in speech or action, until they absolutely have to, in order to deal with actual votes or legislation or to react to issues of the day. They certainly aren't going to paint a bulls-eye on themselves for a situation that is made up, if they can help it.
Finally, the politicians have little control over the situation when someone else makes up a scenario and sets the parameters for what they consider to be a response. US politicians, aware of how much 30 second ads define them, either by themselves or opposition, are PR-managed to the point of being automatons. They repeat the same meaningless slogans and catch-phrases that tested well in focus groups, and that matches with the slick advertising campaigns, their own and via "dark money" groups that they are illegally coordinating with. To respond to something outside their scripted narrative is to cede control in a way that could hurt their message.
None of this speaks well to the current state of US election campaigns. That's because it it is a cesspool, with expected results. I'm not sure how much these factors are true and how much politicians avoid saying anything, and get away with it, in nations that don't have billions in outside money and donations being spent in a perpetual election cycle, so, if someone is looking at it from a non-USA perspective, "your results may vary."
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
up vote
1
down vote
There are a few reasons why.
The first would be that a hypothetical question usually deals with just that, an imaginary situation. Where real life deals with nuance, complexities and multi-variate factors, a hypothetical question is usually unrealistically black and white. Answering a question about something that would not happen, at least in the way it is framed, tells us nothing, so the politician risks having an unrealistic scenario define him or her in a way that they would probably deem to be unfair.
Usually, when a situation like that is posed, it's regarding a contested subject. While someone may agree with a politician 80% of the time, and the 20% of the time are on issues that happen infrequently or don't really impact their lives, the airwaves are filled with ads around election time hammering opponents on single, absurd issues on trivial matters that are blown up to be huge moral shortcomings, according to the ads. For the most part, still, when dealing with an uninformed electorate (in the USA, at least), the average voter is either too dim or too lazy to see the crass manipulation that goes into attack ads. That's why attack ads work. For anything that can be used to attack a politician, they are going to avoid going on the record in speech or action, until they absolutely have to, in order to deal with actual votes or legislation or to react to issues of the day. They certainly aren't going to paint a bulls-eye on themselves for a situation that is made up, if they can help it.
Finally, the politicians have little control over the situation when someone else makes up a scenario and sets the parameters for what they consider to be a response. US politicians, aware of how much 30 second ads define them, either by themselves or opposition, are PR-managed to the point of being automatons. They repeat the same meaningless slogans and catch-phrases that tested well in focus groups, and that matches with the slick advertising campaigns, their own and via "dark money" groups that they are illegally coordinating with. To respond to something outside their scripted narrative is to cede control in a way that could hurt their message.
None of this speaks well to the current state of US election campaigns. That's because it it is a cesspool, with expected results. I'm not sure how much these factors are true and how much politicians avoid saying anything, and get away with it, in nations that don't have billions in outside money and donations being spent in a perpetual election cycle, so, if someone is looking at it from a non-USA perspective, "your results may vary."
There are a few reasons why.
The first would be that a hypothetical question usually deals with just that, an imaginary situation. Where real life deals with nuance, complexities and multi-variate factors, a hypothetical question is usually unrealistically black and white. Answering a question about something that would not happen, at least in the way it is framed, tells us nothing, so the politician risks having an unrealistic scenario define him or her in a way that they would probably deem to be unfair.
Usually, when a situation like that is posed, it's regarding a contested subject. While someone may agree with a politician 80% of the time, and the 20% of the time are on issues that happen infrequently or don't really impact their lives, the airwaves are filled with ads around election time hammering opponents on single, absurd issues on trivial matters that are blown up to be huge moral shortcomings, according to the ads. For the most part, still, when dealing with an uninformed electorate (in the USA, at least), the average voter is either too dim or too lazy to see the crass manipulation that goes into attack ads. That's why attack ads work. For anything that can be used to attack a politician, they are going to avoid going on the record in speech or action, until they absolutely have to, in order to deal with actual votes or legislation or to react to issues of the day. They certainly aren't going to paint a bulls-eye on themselves for a situation that is made up, if they can help it.
Finally, the politicians have little control over the situation when someone else makes up a scenario and sets the parameters for what they consider to be a response. US politicians, aware of how much 30 second ads define them, either by themselves or opposition, are PR-managed to the point of being automatons. They repeat the same meaningless slogans and catch-phrases that tested well in focus groups, and that matches with the slick advertising campaigns, their own and via "dark money" groups that they are illegally coordinating with. To respond to something outside their scripted narrative is to cede control in a way that could hurt their message.
None of this speaks well to the current state of US election campaigns. That's because it it is a cesspool, with expected results. I'm not sure how much these factors are true and how much politicians avoid saying anything, and get away with it, in nations that don't have billions in outside money and donations being spent in a perpetual election cycle, so, if someone is looking at it from a non-USA perspective, "your results may vary."
answered 10 hours ago
PoloHoleSet
10.9k12651
10.9k12651
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You need to clarify your question. Who says it can't be answered? what are the ground but who said that, what politician? There are all kind of hypothetical question, do you have any specific concern?
– nelruk
16 hours ago
Perhaps they simply don’t want to answer the question, whether it is possible or not.
– chirlu
14 hours ago
Move this post over to Meta for Politics before closing. Probably because there are different ways and scenarios you can think of for those type of question. In theory, if this then that, if this then that, if this then that, and so on and so forth!! Whip cream with cherries, do this; chocolate with nuts, do that; and so on and so forth!!
– President Bernie Sanders
11 hours ago
1
I think this was a good question with a bad title, so I've edited the title.
– Paul Johnson
11 hours ago