Politics Repackaged: How eight words shape our world - A modern history of the election slogan
By (Author) Chris Bruni-Lowe
Biteback Publishing
Biteback Publishing
19th June 2025
10th June 2025
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
320.014
Hardback
272
The proliferation of messages that the voting public is exposed to in the digital age means it has never been more important to use the right slogan or phrase in order to capture people's attention. Over the course of an extraordinary career advising organisations and candidates of all political persuasions, strategist and pollster Chris Bruni-Lowe has developed a clear understanding of what language moves people to action.
To that end, he assembled a database comprising 20,000 slogans used in major elections worldwide over the past century, scrutinised the results and assessed all other relevant factors, allowing him to evaluate how effective any slogan is in delivering an election result.
This amazing store of information revealed the remarkable fact that over the past 100 years just eight 'hit' words have been central to the successful outcome of most major elections.
Based on information produced by his database, plus extensive interviews with more than 100 politicians, advisers, academics, marketing executives and behavioural scientists, this utterly unique book sets out to identify what makes an election slogan successful according to those who have been involved in creating them and using them.
Each chapter focuses on one of the eight words and shows how it has contributed to changing the world. Those who have devised a slogan using one of the eight words will explain how they came up with it and offer their assessment of its effectiveness.
Over the past ten years, Chris Bruni-Lowe has polled over 2 million people in more than forty countries for private business and political clients on the left and right. He has conducted polling research that has appeared in more than fifty global publications, including Forbes, the New York Times, Bloomberg, Newsweek and the Financial Times.