Abstract

Results of the last electoral season in Western Europe have been mostly seen in the light of the success of challenger, anti-establishment parties. According to this narrative, past elections have been overwhelmingly dominated by cultural issues such as immigration and the EU. However, these accounts suffer from several limitations. First, they generally focus on the determinants of the static component of electoral results (i.e. vote choice) rather than the factors leading to vote change (i.e. the individual-level component of aggregate electoral change). Second, relying on party manifestos and programmatic platforms, they usually offer a party-based reconstruction of the general climate of elections. As a consequence, they provide only an indirect, at best limited, overview of the actual political issues that might have driven electoral results. To overcome these limitations, in this paper we introduce a new methodological strategy to characterize electoral results in comparative perspective. To do so we leverage an issue-rich public opinion dataset to estimate individual-level vote change towards each party as a function of issue-based party-voter affinity measures in 6 European countries. Relying on 38 logistic regression models (one for each party), our results contradict many current interpretations of electoral results in Western Europe, in fact showing that economic issues, rather than broad cultural ones, emerged as the most relevant predictors of vote inflows. Furthermore, it also demonstrates the relevance of “cross-ideological” mobilization across all the 6 countries covered in this study.

Highlights

  • Social science, and political science perhaps even more, is characterized by its inevitable engagement with different audiences

  • This is not surprising, considering that: (a) serious scholars usually only make claims based on empirical material that properly justifies such claims; and (b) empirical material available in the immediate aftermath of an election usually hardly justifies specific claims on citizen preferences emerging from the electoral result

  • In this paper we identified the issue of the substantive issue characterization of electoral change, i.e. the aim of identifying specific configurations of citizen preferences that drive a particular electoral change

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Political science perhaps even more, is characterized by its inevitable engagement with different audiences. The actual information available for this interpretation is mostly indirect: party platforms, election campaigns, exit-polls estimating the behaviour of particular social groups; geographical results providing more suggestions about the behaviour of the same groups; perhaps even ecological-inference-based estimates of vote turnover tables that try to reconstruct which winning parties attracted votes from which losing parties (albeit both these latter are always prone to even severe ecological fallacy) None of these pieces of information includes direct information about issue determinants of election results. Presentation and discussion of findings are offered, followed by conclusions

CHARACTERIZING ELECTION RESULTS
RECENT PARTY DEVELOPMENTS IN WESTERN EUROPE
OUR PROPOSAL
DATA AND METHODS
FINDINGS
CONCLUSIONS
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