This article investigates prime ministers’ communication strategies during the most recent economic crisis in Europe. It argues that when electoral risk is high but governments’ policy options are severely limited, prime ministers will use specific communication strategies to mitigate electoral risks. Two such communication strategies are analysed – issue engagement and blame shifting – by applying state‐of‐the‐art quantitative text analysis methods on 5,553 speeches of prime ministers in nine European Union member states. Evidence is found for both strategies. Prime ministers talk about the economy more in response to both high (domestic) unemployment and low (domestic) gross domestic product growth. Furthermore, it is found that the (dome...
International audienceAs part of a larger research project, we asked 1,806 adults from France, Greec...
Published online: 06 Nov 2017This article tests the personalisation thesis in Portugal (2002–2015), ...
When things go wrong someone is blamed. Throughout the current crisis there have been several conven...
This article investigates prime ministers' communication strategies during the most recent economic ...
This article analyses differences in the varieties of political rhetoric on structuring and legitimi...
Governments led by nonpartisan, technocratic' prime ministers are a rare phenomenon in parliamentary...
In this paper we analyse the extent to which perceptions of the government's role in the economic cr...
Policy crises often lead to “framing contests,” in which officeholders, opponents, media, and the pu...
The Great Recession is a non-trivial test bed for the theory of economic voting, especially if its p...
There is a puzzle which emerged following the Eurozone crisis: whereas the salience of the economy s...
This article investigates the interactions among parliamentary questions, newspaper coverage on the ...
This article investigates the interactions among parliamentary questions, newspaper coverage on the ...
In this paper we analyse the extent to which perceptions of the government’s role in the economic c...
While acknowledging that the sustainability of sovereign debt is a serious issue that must be confro...
We examine the impact of the current economic crisis on the accuracy of responsibility attribution b...
International audienceAs part of a larger research project, we asked 1,806 adults from France, Greec...
Published online: 06 Nov 2017This article tests the personalisation thesis in Portugal (2002–2015), ...
When things go wrong someone is blamed. Throughout the current crisis there have been several conven...
This article investigates prime ministers' communication strategies during the most recent economic ...
This article analyses differences in the varieties of political rhetoric on structuring and legitimi...
Governments led by nonpartisan, technocratic' prime ministers are a rare phenomenon in parliamentary...
In this paper we analyse the extent to which perceptions of the government's role in the economic cr...
Policy crises often lead to “framing contests,” in which officeholders, opponents, media, and the pu...
The Great Recession is a non-trivial test bed for the theory of economic voting, especially if its p...
There is a puzzle which emerged following the Eurozone crisis: whereas the salience of the economy s...
This article investigates the interactions among parliamentary questions, newspaper coverage on the ...
This article investigates the interactions among parliamentary questions, newspaper coverage on the ...
In this paper we analyse the extent to which perceptions of the government’s role in the economic c...
While acknowledging that the sustainability of sovereign debt is a serious issue that must be confro...
We examine the impact of the current economic crisis on the accuracy of responsibility attribution b...
International audienceAs part of a larger research project, we asked 1,806 adults from France, Greec...
Published online: 06 Nov 2017This article tests the personalisation thesis in Portugal (2002–2015), ...
When things go wrong someone is blamed. Throughout the current crisis there have been several conven...