Why do people vote against their own interests?
The question usually arrives with a mix of frustration and disbelief. It’s often asked about someone else: rural voters, urban voters, young voters, retirees. Whoever the speaker thinks should “know better.”
But the more we read and think about it, the more slippery the question becomes. What exactly counts as someone’s own interests? And why do we assume that voters make decisions the way economists imagine them to—coolly calculating costs and benefits like shoppers comparing tomatoes at the market?
Recently, our Scrapbook assistant pulled together ideas we’ve collected over the years. None of them fully explains the puzzle. But together they suggest a layered way of thinking about it.
The answer seems to live in three layers: psychology, politics, and the information environment.
Layer 1: The Human Mind Is Not a Calculator
Start with psychology.
People like to think they reason their way to political opinions. In practice, it often works the other way around. We adopt beliefs first, then construct reasons afterward.
Jonathan Haidt famously compared human reasoning to a lawyer defending a client rather than a judge evaluating evidence. Once we adopt a belief, we instinctively search for arguments that support it.
Several well-known mechanisms reinforce this tendency:
Cognitive dissonance.
When evidence contradicts our beliefs, we feel psychological discomfort. Instead of changing the belief, we often reinterpret the evidence.
Confirmation bias.
We seek out information that reinforces what we already think and quietly discard the rest.
Motivated ignorance.
Sometimes people avoid information entirely because knowing the truth would force them to reconsider their identity or social group.
In that sense, sticking with a belief—even when evidence mounts against it—can actually be the psychologically comfortable choice.
So before we even get to politics, the first complication appears:
People are not neutral processors of information.
Layer 2: Politics Is About Identity as Much as Policy
Now move up one layer—from psychology to politics.
If voters were motivated purely by economic self-interest, elections would look very different. Instead, political choices often reflect identity and belonging.
People vote in ways that signal
- who they are
- which group they belong to
- what values they want to express
There is another wrinkle here.
Political scientist Suzanne Mettler documented what she calls the "government–citizen disconnect." Many people benefit from government programs without recognizing them as such. Tax credits, subsidies, or infrastructure investments simply appear as part of normal life. Because the connection is invisible, voters may support cutting programs they indirectly rely on.
In other words, people are not always voting against their interests. Sometimes they simply don’t see the connection between policy and outcome.
Layer 3: The Information Environment Shapes What We Believe
The third layer sits beneath both psychology and politics: the information system.
Democracy depends on something we rarely think about—a shared information environment. Citizens need some baseline agreement about facts in order to debate policy.
That shared environment has been fragmenting.
For most of the twentieth century, people in many countries consumed roughly the same news sources. Today, information is filtered through personalized feeds, partisan media ecosystems, and algorithmic recommendation engines.
The result is what some researchers call "bespoke realities".
Different groups encounter different information streams, reinforcing different interpretations of events. In such a landscape, arguments about competing realities quickly turn into arguments about reality itself.
And once reality becomes contested, identity becomes an even stronger guide for decision-making.
The cycle feeds itself:
- identity shapes which information people trust
- trusted information reinforces identity
- political choices follow from that identity
Putting the Layers Together
Seen this way, voting behavior isn’t a simple puzzle of rational choice.
It’s the outcome of a three-layer system:
Psychology
Identity and cognitive biases shape how individuals interpret information.
Politics
Group belonging and moral narratives influence how people translate beliefs into votes.
Information Systems
Media environments determine what information people encounter in the first place.
Put those layers together and something important emerges.
Voting decisions often reflect identity and narrative coherence more than economic calculation.

Laminated Card Version
Why individuals believe things.
identity → motivated reasoning → cognitive bias
Why certain leaders and movements succeed.
anxiety → populism → demagogues → democratic erosion
media fragmentation → algorithmic outrage → collapse of shared reality.
The Real Question
So maybe the question “Why do people vote against their interests?” starts from a flawed assumption.
It assumes that interests are purely economic and that voters approach politics as rational calculators.
But humans rarely operate that way.
We vote as members of tribes, participants in narratives, and inhabitants of information worlds that shape what we see and believe.
Seen from that angle, the mystery isn’t why people sometimes vote against their interests.
The mystery might be why we ever expected them not to.






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