This study examines why citizens in the Netherlands vote for independent local parties. These are parties that run in municipal council elections, but do not run in elections at higher levels. This article examines a number of expectations: namely that voters vote for these parties out dissatisfaction with established parties, that they do so because they have a 'localist' political orientation or that they do so because their own national party is not running in the municipal elections. More support is found for the idea that voters vote for local parties because they are pushed away by national parties (either because they do not participate in some municipalities or because voters distrust them) than for the idea that voters vote for loc...
A defining characteristic of second-order elections is that voters base their decision on considerat...
This study aims to explain why voters in Sweden choose to cast their vote on the, often more unknown...
Voting motives are one of the most studied but still much contested question in political science. T...
This study examines why citizens in the Netherlands vote for independent local parties. These are pa...
This paper examines why the support of independent local parties has grown substantially in the Neth...
This paper examines why the support of independent local parties has grown substantially in the Neth...
In the last 15 years, the Netherlands has witnessed the enormous growth of independent local parties...
Using data for Dutch municipal elections between 1998 and 2018, this paper finds two dominant trends...
Electoral campaigning and its financing at the local level have been hardly studied in spite of the ...
The growing responsibilities of Dutch local governments for policy that was originally carried out b...
Why do voters vote for new political parties? This article tests the microfoundations of why voters ...
Electoral campaigning and its financing at the local level have been hardly studied in spite of the ...
© 2015 Taylor & Francis. A defining characteristic of second-order elections is that voters base t...
Despite their differences, local parties in the Netherlands share a strong degree of localism: they ...
A defining characteristic of second-order elections is that voters base their decision on considerat...
This study aims to explain why voters in Sweden choose to cast their vote on the, often more unknown...
Voting motives are one of the most studied but still much contested question in political science. T...
This study examines why citizens in the Netherlands vote for independent local parties. These are pa...
This paper examines why the support of independent local parties has grown substantially in the Neth...
This paper examines why the support of independent local parties has grown substantially in the Neth...
In the last 15 years, the Netherlands has witnessed the enormous growth of independent local parties...
Using data for Dutch municipal elections between 1998 and 2018, this paper finds two dominant trends...
Electoral campaigning and its financing at the local level have been hardly studied in spite of the ...
The growing responsibilities of Dutch local governments for policy that was originally carried out b...
Why do voters vote for new political parties? This article tests the microfoundations of why voters ...
Electoral campaigning and its financing at the local level have been hardly studied in spite of the ...
© 2015 Taylor & Francis. A defining characteristic of second-order elections is that voters base t...
Despite their differences, local parties in the Netherlands share a strong degree of localism: they ...
A defining characteristic of second-order elections is that voters base their decision on considerat...
This study aims to explain why voters in Sweden choose to cast their vote on the, often more unknown...
Voting motives are one of the most studied but still much contested question in political science. T...