We investigated whether motivated reasoning rooted in partisanship affects the attributions
individuals make about violent attackers? underlying motives and group memberships. Study
1 demonstrated that on the day of the Brexit referendum pro?leavers (vs. pro?remainers)
attributed an exculpatory (i.e., mental health) versus condemnatory (i.e., terrorism) motive to
the killing of a pro-remain politician. Study 2 demonstrated that pro? (vs. anti?) immigration
perceivers in Germany ascribed a mental health (vs. terrorism) motive to a suicide attack by a
Syrian refugee, predicting lower endorsement of punitiveness against his group (i.e.,
refugees) as a whole. Study 3 experimentally manipulated target motives, showing that
Americans distanced a politically-motivated (vs. mentally ill) violent individual from their
ingroup and assigned him harsher punishment? patterns most pronounced amongst high
group identifiers.