Winning Edge
Giving you the tools to lead and influence in the policy arena.
Winning Edge
#74 Fear, Uncertainty, & Doubt
Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.
What is FUD:
- Acronym: Fear, Uncertainty, and Doubt
- Created by former IBM engineer Gene Amdahl 50+ years ago
- Appeals to emotion rather than fact
Virginia Election Case Study:
- Redistricting ballot: over $80 million spent
- Yes side won by less than 2 percentage points
- Exit polls: many voters still uncertain what they voted on
How Both Sides Used FUD:
Yes Side:
- Messaging: protecting democracy, stopping Trump
- Misleading ballot language ruled by judge
- Mailers disguised as "local newspapers"
No Side:
- Themes: protecting voting rights, stopping power grab
- Used 2017 Obama clip condemning gerrymandering against his own endorsement
When to Use FUD:
1. One-off Decisions
- Ballot questions without party labels
2. Playing Defense
- Getting voters to hesitate or stick with status quo
- Lower bar than getting action
3. Issue-Based, Not Person-Based
- Focus on policy consequences, not opponent
- Easier for voters to admit policy isn't working than being wrong about a person
- Lets voters "be right again" without feeling they changed their mind
Caution:
- FUD only gives reasons against something
- Must pair with positive message about what you'll do
Bottom Line: Use FUD sparingly for one-off decisions, defense, and issue-based arguments - always combine with positive messaging.
For more campaign messaging tactics, refer to the accompanying one-page PDF.
Winning Edge gives you the tools you need to lead and influence in the political and policy arenas. Every other week, Winning Edge releases short (approximately 5-minute) spots—or “snacks”—focused on one of four areas: fundraising, media, policy, or persuasion.
For more, visit our website: www.thecommonwealthpartners.com.