In parliamentary systems, parties compete for votes and offices in the electoral arena but in many systems they also cooperate in the legislative arena. This paper examines the question of whether the government status of parties affects their legislative behaviour and, hence, policy outcomes. We develop a simple veto player model that includes parties positional goals (vote, office, etc.) to formalize the notion of accommodating legislative behaviour. The model predicts that government parties are most accommodating while opposition parties are least accommodating. The hypothesis is then tested by comparing two pairs of most similar political systems: Danish and Finnish coalition governments, as well as German and Australian bicameralism....
Various strands of literature in comparative politics suggest that there is a differential impact of...
Bipartisan bills are frequent in presidential systems, but they exist in virtually all parliamentary...
Despite the central role of policy preferences in the subsequent behaviour of legislators, preferenc...
Government Status and Legislative Behavior Ganghof/Bräuninger 2 In parliamentary systems, parties co...
In parliamentary systems, parties compete for votes and offices in the electoral arena, but in many ...
In parliamentary systems, parties compete for votes and offices in the electoral arena but in many s...
'In parliamentary systems, parties compete for votes and offices in the electoral arena but in many ...
"In parlamentarischen Systemen konkurrieren Parteien um Wählerstimmen und Ämter, aber in vielen Syst...
"In parlamentarischen Systemen konkurrieren Parteien um Wählerstimmen und Ämter, aber in vielen Syst...
In contrast to the study of outcomes such as social spending, systematic comparative analysis of pol...
Most democracies are governed by coalitions, comprising multiple political parties with conflicting ...
The veto players theory can be used to analyze all political systems regardless of regime (president...
Members of Parliament (MPs) might have a free mandate from a legal perspective, but they are certain...
ii The veto players theory claims that there are institutional and partisan actors, indi-vidual or c...
Veto player theory generates predictions about governments' capacity for policy change. Due to the d...
Various strands of literature in comparative politics suggest that there is a differential impact of...
Bipartisan bills are frequent in presidential systems, but they exist in virtually all parliamentary...
Despite the central role of policy preferences in the subsequent behaviour of legislators, preferenc...
Government Status and Legislative Behavior Ganghof/Bräuninger 2 In parliamentary systems, parties co...
In parliamentary systems, parties compete for votes and offices in the electoral arena, but in many ...
In parliamentary systems, parties compete for votes and offices in the electoral arena but in many s...
'In parliamentary systems, parties compete for votes and offices in the electoral arena but in many ...
"In parlamentarischen Systemen konkurrieren Parteien um Wählerstimmen und Ämter, aber in vielen Syst...
"In parlamentarischen Systemen konkurrieren Parteien um Wählerstimmen und Ämter, aber in vielen Syst...
In contrast to the study of outcomes such as social spending, systematic comparative analysis of pol...
Most democracies are governed by coalitions, comprising multiple political parties with conflicting ...
The veto players theory can be used to analyze all political systems regardless of regime (president...
Members of Parliament (MPs) might have a free mandate from a legal perspective, but they are certain...
ii The veto players theory claims that there are institutional and partisan actors, indi-vidual or c...
Veto player theory generates predictions about governments' capacity for policy change. Due to the d...
Various strands of literature in comparative politics suggest that there is a differential impact of...
Bipartisan bills are frequent in presidential systems, but they exist in virtually all parliamentary...
Despite the central role of policy preferences in the subsequent behaviour of legislators, preferenc...