This article examines the formation of the Grand Coalition in the context of the German party system and draws upon a synthetic analytical framework derived from formal coalition theory. It argues that both the SPD and CDU/CSU would have anticipated that the Grand Coalition would have generated relatively high levels of inter-party conflict as well as significant electoral costs. The article demonstrates that the CDU/CSU's motives for entering a Grand Coalition were quite evident but those of the SPD were more questionable. The SPD's course of action is only explained by a number of specific policy objectives, a desire to minimise co-ordination costs, and through the concept of pure time preference, in which SPD elites demonstrated a prefer...
The article is built on four propositions. First, there is a latent potential within the German poli...
In Germany, Grand Coalitions of the two major parties - the Christian Democrats (CDU/CSU) and the So...
While the European Parliament’s two largest political groups, the European People’s Party and the Pr...
The article uses a thick synthetic analytical framework, derived from the established coalition lite...
The article draws upon the formal coalition literature to demonstrate that party system change over ...
The last three decades has seen a steady electoral decline in the Volksparteien, culminating in the ...
Since 1949, the CDU/CSU has been the dominant party grouping in the German party system yet has rare...
How important are the preferences of voters in coalition negotiations? Marc Debus and Jochen Müller ...
In Germany, Grand Coalitions of the two major parties - the Christian Democrats (CDU/CSU) and the So...
Over the last two decades, the formation of grand coalitions has grown in the European Union (EU), e...
This book chapter provides an analysis of cabinet formation after the German election of 22 Septembe...
A dominant assumption in the existing literature on party organisation in Western Europe holds that ...
While the European Parliament’s two largest political groups, the European People’s Party and the Pr...
This article explores a number of themes common to the work of Gordon Smith and to more formal model...
In 2001 Berlin's grand coalition collapsed in dramatic circumstances, leading to a Land election whi...
The article is built on four propositions. First, there is a latent potential within the German poli...
In Germany, Grand Coalitions of the two major parties - the Christian Democrats (CDU/CSU) and the So...
While the European Parliament’s two largest political groups, the European People’s Party and the Pr...
The article uses a thick synthetic analytical framework, derived from the established coalition lite...
The article draws upon the formal coalition literature to demonstrate that party system change over ...
The last three decades has seen a steady electoral decline in the Volksparteien, culminating in the ...
Since 1949, the CDU/CSU has been the dominant party grouping in the German party system yet has rare...
How important are the preferences of voters in coalition negotiations? Marc Debus and Jochen Müller ...
In Germany, Grand Coalitions of the two major parties - the Christian Democrats (CDU/CSU) and the So...
Over the last two decades, the formation of grand coalitions has grown in the European Union (EU), e...
This book chapter provides an analysis of cabinet formation after the German election of 22 Septembe...
A dominant assumption in the existing literature on party organisation in Western Europe holds that ...
While the European Parliament’s two largest political groups, the European People’s Party and the Pr...
This article explores a number of themes common to the work of Gordon Smith and to more formal model...
In 2001 Berlin's grand coalition collapsed in dramatic circumstances, leading to a Land election whi...
The article is built on four propositions. First, there is a latent potential within the German poli...
In Germany, Grand Coalitions of the two major parties - the Christian Democrats (CDU/CSU) and the So...
While the European Parliament’s two largest political groups, the European People’s Party and the Pr...