Abstract: Subnational governments have become more numerous and more powerful around the world, increasing the importance of subnational elections. However, we still know little about the impact of regional electoral outcomes on citizens' political support, and there is no systematic comparison of the impact of election outcomes on citizens' satisfaction with democracy. In this research note, we provide such a comparison by investigating how the winner-loser gap in citizens' satisfaction with democracy differs across regional and national elections. Using data from Canada, Germany and Spain, we first show that there is a winner-loser gap in satisfaction with democracy following regional elections. The winner-loser gap at the regional level ...
Electoral 'winners' (i.e., voters casting a ballot for a party included in the post-electoral govern...
Electoral 'winners' (i.e., voters casting a ballot for a party included in the post-electoral govern...
This paper disentangles the relationship between election outcomes and satisfaction with democracy. ...
Democratic theory tells us that competition between political parties fosters more responsive govern...
Since the onset of the current wave of democratization, there has been a growing interest in researc...
Research on direct democracy is often entirely sub-national research focusing on a single country or...
There is a substantial literature on the impact of having voting for an electorally victorious party...
Numerous studies conclude that countries in which citizens express higher levels of satisfaction wit...
Previous authors have found greater political support among electoral winners than losers, but they ...
The last decade has witnessed the raise of populist parties and a number of actors that question lib...
Previous research has shown that people in consensual democracies with a proportional electoral syst...
This project investigates how citizens in advanced industrial democracies evaluate their democratic ...
Popular consent is an essential element for success and stability of democracies. Research has repea...
Consensual-pluralistic institutional features of representative democracies have traditionally been ...
Over the years, many scholars have examined the relationship between electoral systems and measures ...
Electoral 'winners' (i.e., voters casting a ballot for a party included in the post-electoral govern...
Electoral 'winners' (i.e., voters casting a ballot for a party included in the post-electoral govern...
This paper disentangles the relationship between election outcomes and satisfaction with democracy. ...
Democratic theory tells us that competition between political parties fosters more responsive govern...
Since the onset of the current wave of democratization, there has been a growing interest in researc...
Research on direct democracy is often entirely sub-national research focusing on a single country or...
There is a substantial literature on the impact of having voting for an electorally victorious party...
Numerous studies conclude that countries in which citizens express higher levels of satisfaction wit...
Previous authors have found greater political support among electoral winners than losers, but they ...
The last decade has witnessed the raise of populist parties and a number of actors that question lib...
Previous research has shown that people in consensual democracies with a proportional electoral syst...
This project investigates how citizens in advanced industrial democracies evaluate their democratic ...
Popular consent is an essential element for success and stability of democracies. Research has repea...
Consensual-pluralistic institutional features of representative democracies have traditionally been ...
Over the years, many scholars have examined the relationship between electoral systems and measures ...
Electoral 'winners' (i.e., voters casting a ballot for a party included in the post-electoral govern...
Electoral 'winners' (i.e., voters casting a ballot for a party included in the post-electoral govern...
This paper disentangles the relationship between election outcomes and satisfaction with democracy. ...