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Scandal

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Charting the changes from Watergate to the present, this book is a rigorous and compelling investigation of the politics of scandals.
  • 25 November 2025
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Once, it was thought, a scandal was the kiss of death for a political career. Today, however, surviving scandal seems to be the norm. Donald Trump has weathered—and even perhaps benefited from—controversies that would have been unimaginable for virtually any other candidate. Prominent figures in both parties have won elections and remained in office despite credible allegations of wrongdoing. Do scandals still matter? When and why do voters punish politicians or give them a free pass?

Charting the changes from Watergate to the present, this book is a rigorous and compelling investigation of the politics of scandals. Bringing together wide-ranging survey data, innovative experiment design, and historical analysis, Brandon Rottinghaus demonstrates how political polarization, affective partisanship, fading trust in media, and the spread of misinformation have diminished the resonance of controversies. Although scandals still fell many politicians, there is a clear trend over time for fewer voters to be swayed by them. In a polarized world, scandals take only a modest toll on politicians’ approval ratings, survival in office, ambitions, and legacies. In many cases, partisans accept—or even embrace—misbehavior from members of their own party and revel in scandals affecting the opposing party. Challenging conventional wisdom with extensive data, this book illuminates the declining significance of scandals and the consequences for democratic accountability.

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Price: $110.00
Pages: 224
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Imprint: Columbia University Press
Publication Date: 25 November 2025
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780231218818
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: POLITICAL SCIENCE / Corruption & Misconduct, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Public Opinion Polling, POLITICAL SCIENCE / American Government / General
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Might scandals serve as a litmus test for American politics? Brandon Rottinghaus argues so. In this illuminating account, he shows that scandals bite hardest when our politics are reasonably healthy—when systems of accountability still function. But when polarization deepens and those systems falter, scandals—all too common in American life—cease to derail political careers. Unpunished scandals, we come to appreciate, stand as markers of democratic decay.
Brandon Rottinghaus is professor of political science at the University of Houston. He is the cohost of Party Politics, a PBS TV8 program, radio show, and podcast on Houston Public Media.

Acknowledgments
Introduction: The Death of Scandal?
1. Studying Scandal: Empirical Evidence Since Watergate
2. Weathering the Storm: How to Survive a Scandal
3. How Polarization Minimizes Scandals
4. Everything Is a Scandal These Days
5. The Effects of Scandals on Political Legacies
Conclusion: Why Scandals Are Good (and Why We Need Them)
Notes
Index