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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Loyalty perceptions influence how constructive deviance is viewed. Republicans for Harris members saw themselves as loyal, while mainstream Republicans perceived them as less loyal, impacting group dynamics.

Keywords:
group loyaltygroup normsingroup deviancepartisan identitypolitical dissent

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Area of Science:

  • Social Psychology
  • Political Science
  • Group Dynamics

Background:

  • Deviance presents a dual challenge: threatening group cohesion while potentially signaling commitment to principles.
  • Understanding how loyalty influences perceptions of constructive deviance is crucial for group functioning.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To examine how loyalty shapes perceptions of constructive deviance.
  • To analyze the case of Republicans for Harris (RHs) during the 2024 U.S. presidential election.

Main Methods:

  • Cross-sectional study comparing self-perceptions of deviants (RHs) with perceptions of ingroup (Republicans for Trump; RTs) and outgroup (Democrats) members.
  • Data collected across three time points.

Main Results:

  • Significant asymmetries in perception: RTs viewed RHs as less loyal, less prototypical, and more prone to defection than RHs perceived themselves.
  • All groups (RHs, RTs, Democrats) reported warmer feelings toward deviants perceived as more loyal and prototypical.

Conclusions:

  • Constructive deviants maintain positive self-views by framing their actions as fidelity to group principles, not rejection.
  • Loyalty and protypicality are key factors in mitigating negative perceptions of constructive deviance.