Do prime ministers pay an electoral penalty for using procedural force to pass laws? Influential theories of parliamentary governance and legislative bargaining assume that the use of the confidence vote procedure – parliamentary governments’ most powerful legislative weapon – entails an electoral cost, but evidence on this important claim has been scarce. This article provides the first estimates of how prime ministers’ public approval responds to their use of the confidence vote. Analysing time series data from France 1979–2008, it is found that prime ministers experience a considerable drop in approval after their use of the confidence vote that is not accounted for by standard economic and p...
Conventional wisdom has it that the state of the economy drives public support for governments. Yet ...
Electoral institutions should systematically affect the propensity of a country to rely and spend on...
Prominent studies of electoral accountability and economic voting suggest that government constraint...
Do prime ministers pay an electoral penalty for using procedural force to pass laws? Influential the...
There is striking variation across parliamentary democracies in the power of prime ministers to empl...
International audiencePoliticians are always seeking popularity, and they use several tools to try t...
The higher legislative success of parliamentary governments relative to presidential governments has...
While executives in many democracies have constitutional powers to circumvent the majoritarian legis...
International audienceThe paper analyzes the relations between the legal and regulatory production a...
The PARTIPOL project, funded by the French Research Agency, explores the factors and mechanisms at p...
International audienceThis paper studies the relationship between incumbent MPs’ activities and thei...
Many European presidents have extensive constitutional powers to affect the timing of early parliame...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Department of Political Science, 2015.Prime ministers, as ...
In this article, we study popularity functions for the French President and Prime Minister. We show ...
This article proposes a method to estimate relative ministerial weights in parliamentary democracies...
Conventional wisdom has it that the state of the economy drives public support for governments. Yet ...
Electoral institutions should systematically affect the propensity of a country to rely and spend on...
Prominent studies of electoral accountability and economic voting suggest that government constraint...
Do prime ministers pay an electoral penalty for using procedural force to pass laws? Influential the...
There is striking variation across parliamentary democracies in the power of prime ministers to empl...
International audiencePoliticians are always seeking popularity, and they use several tools to try t...
The higher legislative success of parliamentary governments relative to presidential governments has...
While executives in many democracies have constitutional powers to circumvent the majoritarian legis...
International audienceThe paper analyzes the relations between the legal and regulatory production a...
The PARTIPOL project, funded by the French Research Agency, explores the factors and mechanisms at p...
International audienceThis paper studies the relationship between incumbent MPs’ activities and thei...
Many European presidents have extensive constitutional powers to affect the timing of early parliame...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Department of Political Science, 2015.Prime ministers, as ...
In this article, we study popularity functions for the French President and Prime Minister. We show ...
This article proposes a method to estimate relative ministerial weights in parliamentary democracies...
Conventional wisdom has it that the state of the economy drives public support for governments. Yet ...
Electoral institutions should systematically affect the propensity of a country to rely and spend on...
Prominent studies of electoral accountability and economic voting suggest that government constraint...