A landmark finding in recent research on electoral behaviour is that voters anticipate the postelection bargaining process among potential members of the governing coalition, and that these anticipated policy agreements inform their vote choice. In this article, this finding is qualified by arguing, and then showing empirically, that when the expected policy change after the elections is marginal or non-existent, ceteris paribus, ‘simple’ proximity voting should prevail. The argument is tested by using two different but complementary research strategies applied to an individual-level data set constructed from electoral surveys in 28 countries over a 20-year period, and two recent national surveys in which respondents were directly asked to ...
The paper investigates how poll information and coalition signals affect strategic voting, defined a...
In most developed democracies, parties adjust their positions to polls and public opinion. Yet, in a...
Research on comparative voter turnout has produced a puzzling set of findings: proportional represen...
In this paper, I suggest that voters may act strategically in proportional representation elections ...
Compensational voting refers to when voters cast a vote for a more extreme party than they prefer, i...
Political theorists have argued that democracies should strive for high turnout,leading a number of ...
In most modern parliamentary democracies, it is unlikely that single party governments will be forme...
© 2018 European Consortium for Political Research For a number of decades now, scholars have been in...
This paper examines how a party’s decision to enter a coalition government affects voter perceptions...
This thesis tests Franklin & Weber's finding that national elections have a temporal proximity-effec...
While most coalition governments form after the results of an election, some parties choose to annou...
Political theorists have argued that democracies should strive for high turnout, leading to an argum...
© 2018 Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature Political theorists have argued...
Coalition governments are the norm in parliamentary democracies. Yet, despite the predominance of th...
In Parliamentary democracies coalitions frequently reshuffle the allocation of cabinet posts while i...
The paper investigates how poll information and coalition signals affect strategic voting, defined a...
In most developed democracies, parties adjust their positions to polls and public opinion. Yet, in a...
Research on comparative voter turnout has produced a puzzling set of findings: proportional represen...
In this paper, I suggest that voters may act strategically in proportional representation elections ...
Compensational voting refers to when voters cast a vote for a more extreme party than they prefer, i...
Political theorists have argued that democracies should strive for high turnout,leading a number of ...
In most modern parliamentary democracies, it is unlikely that single party governments will be forme...
© 2018 European Consortium for Political Research For a number of decades now, scholars have been in...
This paper examines how a party’s decision to enter a coalition government affects voter perceptions...
This thesis tests Franklin & Weber's finding that national elections have a temporal proximity-effec...
While most coalition governments form after the results of an election, some parties choose to annou...
Political theorists have argued that democracies should strive for high turnout, leading to an argum...
© 2018 Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature Political theorists have argued...
Coalition governments are the norm in parliamentary democracies. Yet, despite the predominance of th...
In Parliamentary democracies coalitions frequently reshuffle the allocation of cabinet posts while i...
The paper investigates how poll information and coalition signals affect strategic voting, defined a...
In most developed democracies, parties adjust their positions to polls and public opinion. Yet, in a...
Research on comparative voter turnout has produced a puzzling set of findings: proportional represen...