“…With regard to political outcomes, the motivational bases of SDO and RWA should draw people towards political parties (and policies) that, respectively, bolster group-based inequalities and manage threats to traditional norms and group cohesion (Duckitt & Sibley, 2009). Consistent with this thesis, SDO and RWA correlate positively with support for conservative/right-wing policies (i.e., policies that promote group cohesion and/or are hierarchy enhancing) and political parties (Azevedo, Jost, Rothmund, & Sterling, 2019;Choma & Hanoch, 2017;Crawford & Pilanski, 2014;Duckitt & Sibley, 2016;Dunwoody & Plane, 2019;Liu, Huang, & McFedries, 2008;Perry & Sibley, 2013;Sibley & Wilson, 2007;Van Assche, Dhont, & Pettigrew, 2019). Furthermore, experimental research shows that RWA and SDO predict political candidate support more strongly when those candidates frame their policy positions in terms of threats to social cohesion and group status, respectively (Crawford, Bradya, Pilanskia, & Ernya, 2013).…”