Publication: The Political Paradox: Analyzing the Success of Older Candidates in Political Elections Despite the Presence of Ageist Public Sentiment
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This thesis explores the political paradox at the heart of modern American elections: why do older candidates continue to succeed at the ballot box, even as concerns about aging leadership and age-related competence dominate public discourse? Despite a rising awareness of ageism and growing generational divides, the average age of elected officials continues to climb. Through a combination of historical data analysis, an original survey measuring explicit age bias, and an original Implicit Association Test (IAT) designed to uncover subconscious attitudes toward older candidates, I investigate the extent and nature of age-related bias in U.S. politics. My findings show that while voters tend to favor candidates within a perceived “age sweet spot” of 50 to 65. Additionally, political parties and institutional factors are driving the nomination of increasingly older candidates. I argue that the success of older leaders is not a reflection of shifting voter preferences, but rather a product of political nomination decisions and media framing that often amplifies ageist stereotypes. This research underscores the need to critically examine the role of age in candidate evaluations and disagrees with the notion that age alone should determine a candidate’s fitness to lead.