Much of the literature on political representation provides empirical evidence that elections successfully link the policy preferences of citizens to the policy preferences of their representatives in parliament and to public policy. However, most of these studies are based on the congruence on the left–right dimension rather than on specific issues. Using empirical data from the Netherlands we show that on specific issues elections seem to fail as an instrument to connect the policy preferences of a large part of the electorate to the policy positions of their representatives because these issues are poorly related to the left–right dimension
Attitudinal correspondence between voters and candidates is an integral part of the chain of politic...
Politicians are frequently castigated as being ‘out of touch with voters’, with populist movements o...
Whose preferences determine the direction of government policy? Is it the political centre, formally...
peer-reviewedIt is often said that European Parliament elections fail as an instrument to express th...
There is widespread agreement among scholars that political competition in Western Europe is multidi...
This paper examines the extent to which conditions for the 'representative party government' model o...
The level of congruence between parties and their voters can vary greatly from one policy issue to a...
Drawing on spatial models of political competition, this research investigates whether decision weig...
This study examines whether or not political representation in the Netherlands is biased toward the ...
This paper investigates the differences in the representational performance of mainstream and niche ...
Outside the US, the crucial question of how well politicians represent the preferences of voters is ...
How does the degree to which European citizens see themselves represented by political parties relat...
Recent research demonstrates that political parties in western Europe are generally structured along...
The level of congruence between parties and their voters can vary greatly from one policy issue to a...
What factors influence how closely the positions of political parties match the positions of their v...
Attitudinal correspondence between voters and candidates is an integral part of the chain of politic...
Politicians are frequently castigated as being ‘out of touch with voters’, with populist movements o...
Whose preferences determine the direction of government policy? Is it the political centre, formally...
peer-reviewedIt is often said that European Parliament elections fail as an instrument to express th...
There is widespread agreement among scholars that political competition in Western Europe is multidi...
This paper examines the extent to which conditions for the 'representative party government' model o...
The level of congruence between parties and their voters can vary greatly from one policy issue to a...
Drawing on spatial models of political competition, this research investigates whether decision weig...
This study examines whether or not political representation in the Netherlands is biased toward the ...
This paper investigates the differences in the representational performance of mainstream and niche ...
Outside the US, the crucial question of how well politicians represent the preferences of voters is ...
How does the degree to which European citizens see themselves represented by political parties relat...
Recent research demonstrates that political parties in western Europe are generally structured along...
The level of congruence between parties and their voters can vary greatly from one policy issue to a...
What factors influence how closely the positions of political parties match the positions of their v...
Attitudinal correspondence between voters and candidates is an integral part of the chain of politic...
Politicians are frequently castigated as being ‘out of touch with voters’, with populist movements o...
Whose preferences determine the direction of government policy? Is it the political centre, formally...