This article highlights the electoral effects of holding salient portfolios within a coalition government. For voters, holding ministries can be seen as a symbol of a party’s success within the coalition. As a voting heuristic, parties not controlling the portfolios on issues important to their platforms signal their failure to achieve these goals. Following this perspective, we hypothesize that the difference between coalition parties that hold salient portfolios and those that do not partially predicts the extent of the electoral cost of coalition participation. Using a dataset that covers 11 European parliamentary democracies between 1966 and 2002, we show that for junior coalition partners there is an electoral reward for holding their ...
Which party controls which cabinet posts is an important determinant of how multi-party governments ...
This article argues that long periods out of office make parties impatient and more willing to make ...
Most theoretical studies of coalition politics have focused on selection, rather than accountability...
This article highlights the electoral effects of holding salient portfolios within a coalition gover...
Coalitions are the norm across Europe, where proportional electoral systems tend to be the norm and ...
In parliamentary democracies, cabinet ministers hold very important positions because they make poli...
We build on previous theories of junior minister allocation and coalition oversight by incorporating...
The question of “who gets what?” is one of the most interesting issues in coalition politics. Resear...
Does policy-making in coalition governments affect cabinet parties’ electoral performance? Previous ...
In this dissertation, I investigate a key distinction in the electoral origins of governing coalitio...
According to theories on coalition formation, parties with a key position in the coalition game rece...
Issue salience and ideological disagreement often predict coalition government behavior. However, re...
<p>What motivates political parties in the legislative arena? Existing legislative bargaining models...
Abstract. Perhaps the strongest empirical finding in political science is ‘Gamson’s Law’: the near-p...
This dissertation examines the interaction between voters and party elites in parliamentary democrac...
Which party controls which cabinet posts is an important determinant of how multi-party governments ...
This article argues that long periods out of office make parties impatient and more willing to make ...
Most theoretical studies of coalition politics have focused on selection, rather than accountability...
This article highlights the electoral effects of holding salient portfolios within a coalition gover...
Coalitions are the norm across Europe, where proportional electoral systems tend to be the norm and ...
In parliamentary democracies, cabinet ministers hold very important positions because they make poli...
We build on previous theories of junior minister allocation and coalition oversight by incorporating...
The question of “who gets what?” is one of the most interesting issues in coalition politics. Resear...
Does policy-making in coalition governments affect cabinet parties’ electoral performance? Previous ...
In this dissertation, I investigate a key distinction in the electoral origins of governing coalitio...
According to theories on coalition formation, parties with a key position in the coalition game rece...
Issue salience and ideological disagreement often predict coalition government behavior. However, re...
<p>What motivates political parties in the legislative arena? Existing legislative bargaining models...
Abstract. Perhaps the strongest empirical finding in political science is ‘Gamson’s Law’: the near-p...
This dissertation examines the interaction between voters and party elites in parliamentary democrac...
Which party controls which cabinet posts is an important determinant of how multi-party governments ...
This article argues that long periods out of office make parties impatient and more willing to make ...
Most theoretical studies of coalition politics have focused on selection, rather than accountability...