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Voters' short-term responsiveness to coalition deals
[journal article]
Abstract Government formation in multiparty systems requires election winners to strike deals to form a coalition government. Do voters respond and how do they respond to coalition government deals? This paper examines the short-term consequences of coalition government formation on voters in European democr... view more
Government formation in multiparty systems requires election winners to strike deals to form a coalition government. Do voters respond and how do they respond to coalition government deals? This paper examines the short-term consequences of coalition government formation on voters in European democracies relying on survey panel data and original content analysis of coalition agreements. It tests theoretical expectations that deal with both the actual and perceived ideological shifts parties make when joining coalition deals as well as the effect of a much simpler heuristic cue based on preferences. The findings indicate that coalition deals have consequences on party preferences, but voter perceptions play a much stronger effect than the actual content of coalition deals. These results have important implications for our understanding of public opinion and provide important insights into the current difficulties and challenges of government formation and representative democracy.... view less
Keywords
perception; Netherlands; formation of a government; Austria; voter; Federal Republic of Germany; democracy; representative democracy; coalition; coalition formation; Great Britain; multi-party system
Classification
Political Process, Elections, Political Sociology, Political Culture
Free Keywords
coalition deals; government formation; voters’ perceptions; ZA5305: Short-term Campaign Panel (GLES 2009) (Data file Version 5.0.0); ZA6804: Short-term Campaign Panel (GLES 2017) (Data file Version 6.0.0)
Document language
English
Publication Year
2021
Page/Pages
p. 1-12
Journal
Party Politics (2021)
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/13540688211029794
ISSN
1460-3683
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed