This article approaches the puzzle of how parties can strategically anticipate coalition formation and make themselves more attractive coalition partners in their electoral strategies. It argues that parties can strategically adjust the salience of issues that are secondary to them in pursuit of increased ‘coalitionability’. It tests the argument through analysis of the salience of secondary policy dimensions of up to 232 European parties between 1970 and 2019, finding evidence that parties adjust the levels of salience of their secondary dimension in response to the probability of their being included in a coalition government and their distance from the coalition in which they are most likely to be included
In a multidimensional environment, parties may have compelling incentives to obscure their preferenc...
This article highlights the electoral effects of holding salient portfolios within a coalition gover...
Why do some parties coordinate their electoral strategies as part of a pre-electoral coalition, whil...
This article approaches the puzzle of how parties can strategically anticipate coalition formation a...
In this paper, I suggest that voters may act strategically in proportional representation elections ...
Parties coordinate on a range of activities. They invite leaders from other parties to their nationa...
In contexts with multi-party governing coalitions national electorates employ heuristics that are ad...
In most developed democracies, parties adjust their positions to polls and public opinion. Yet, in a...
Policy in coalition governments (a) depends on negotiations between parties that (b) continue betwee...
This dissertation explores the moderating role of voters’ partisan attachments for our understanding...
This paper analyzes whether the formation of coalition governments pro-vides voters with information...
This article analyses the impact of government prospects and government participation on party polic...
In multi-party democracies, several parties usually have to join together in coalition to form gover...
While most coalition governments form after the results of an election, some parties choose to annou...
In a multidimensional environment, parties may have compelling incentives to obscure their preferenc...
This article highlights the electoral effects of holding salient portfolios within a coalition gover...
Why do some parties coordinate their electoral strategies as part of a pre-electoral coalition, whil...
This article approaches the puzzle of how parties can strategically anticipate coalition formation a...
In this paper, I suggest that voters may act strategically in proportional representation elections ...
Parties coordinate on a range of activities. They invite leaders from other parties to their nationa...
In contexts with multi-party governing coalitions national electorates employ heuristics that are ad...
In most developed democracies, parties adjust their positions to polls and public opinion. Yet, in a...
Policy in coalition governments (a) depends on negotiations between parties that (b) continue betwee...
This dissertation explores the moderating role of voters’ partisan attachments for our understanding...
This paper analyzes whether the formation of coalition governments pro-vides voters with information...
This article analyses the impact of government prospects and government participation on party polic...
In multi-party democracies, several parties usually have to join together in coalition to form gover...
While most coalition governments form after the results of an election, some parties choose to annou...
In a multidimensional environment, parties may have compelling incentives to obscure their preferenc...
This article highlights the electoral effects of holding salient portfolios within a coalition gover...
Why do some parties coordinate their electoral strategies as part of a pre-electoral coalition, whil...