Abstract
European democracies have experienced drastic changes in electoral competition. Voter support for insider parties that have traditionally governed has declined while support for radical and populist parties has increased. Simultaneously, citizens’ declining political trust has become a concern, as confidence in political institutions and actors is low across numerous countries. Interestingly, the linkage between political trust and support for insider parties has not been empirically established but deduced from the fact that outsider parties are often supported by dissatisfied citizens. We address this gap adopting both an institutional- and an actor-centered approach by investigating whether trust in parliaments and in parties is associated with the electoral performance of insider parties on the aggregate level. Combining different data sources in a novel way, we apply time-series cross-section models to a dataset containing 30 countries and 137 elections from 1998 to 2018. Our results show that when political trust is low, particularly institutional trust, insider parties receive less electoral support. Hence, we provide empirical evidence that decreasing levels of political trust are the downfall of insider parties, thereby opening a window of opportunity for challenging outsider parties.
Highlights
The third wave of democratization represented a global trend in which over 60 countries transitioned to democracy (Huntington, 1991)
The motivation of this assessment stems from the fact that disaffection with politics benefits the electoral fortune of challenger parties
We argued that the window of opportunity for these new or outsider parties is logically due to established insider parties losing the trust of voters in the democratic process
Summary
The third wave of democratization represented a global trend in which over 60 countries transitioned to democracy (Huntington, 1991). In this study, we examine the relationship between institutional and actor-centered political trust and the electoral fortune of insider parties, i.e. the parties that are or have recently been in government. We find that higher levels of political trust lead to more electoral support for insider parties.
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