The 2005 election in Britain saw Labour under Tony Blair lose 47 seats, yet still comfortably retain Government. This article explores the influence of immigration issues and ethnic communities’, voting patterns on the election outcomes. It concludes that Labour was able to neutralise public concern about the management of immigration by introducing a series of control measures prior to the election. Copyright. Monash University and the author/
A previously overlooked explanation for varying individual levels of political trust is concern abou...
In the 1964 General Election, Conservative candidate Peter Griffiths won a seat in Smethwick with a ...
A previously overlooked explanation for varying individual levels of political trust is concern abou...
Using data from the 2010 UK general election, the article shows that there is a distinctive calculu...
This article develops and tests a set of theoretical mechanisms by which candidate ethnicity may hav...
With a general election looming in Britain, early 2005 witnessed the ugly—if far from unprecedented—...
This article explores the extent to which Labor at the national level is becoming dependent on an et...
This article examines the extent to which coverage of immigration issues has featured in mainstream ...
This article examines the extent to which coverage of immigration issues has featured in mainstream ...
Do policy failures inevitably lead to electoral punishment? This paper examines the role of immigrat...
In the 2015 General Election campaign immigration was a key battleground issue. It featured strongly...
In this article we assess the electoral effects of the nomination of ethnic minority candidates. We ...
This article examines the extent to which coverage of immigration issues has featured in mainstream ...
This article investigates whether ethnic minority individuals are more likely to vote when they can ...
At the 2005 general election in the UK, held on 5 May, the Labour Party won an historically unpreced...
A previously overlooked explanation for varying individual levels of political trust is concern abou...
In the 1964 General Election, Conservative candidate Peter Griffiths won a seat in Smethwick with a ...
A previously overlooked explanation for varying individual levels of political trust is concern abou...
Using data from the 2010 UK general election, the article shows that there is a distinctive calculu...
This article develops and tests a set of theoretical mechanisms by which candidate ethnicity may hav...
With a general election looming in Britain, early 2005 witnessed the ugly—if far from unprecedented—...
This article explores the extent to which Labor at the national level is becoming dependent on an et...
This article examines the extent to which coverage of immigration issues has featured in mainstream ...
This article examines the extent to which coverage of immigration issues has featured in mainstream ...
Do policy failures inevitably lead to electoral punishment? This paper examines the role of immigrat...
In the 2015 General Election campaign immigration was a key battleground issue. It featured strongly...
In this article we assess the electoral effects of the nomination of ethnic minority candidates. We ...
This article examines the extent to which coverage of immigration issues has featured in mainstream ...
This article investigates whether ethnic minority individuals are more likely to vote when they can ...
At the 2005 general election in the UK, held on 5 May, the Labour Party won an historically unpreced...
A previously overlooked explanation for varying individual levels of political trust is concern abou...
In the 1964 General Election, Conservative candidate Peter Griffiths won a seat in Smethwick with a ...
A previously overlooked explanation for varying individual levels of political trust is concern abou...