TY - JOUR
T1 - Mind the gap
T2 - How party–voter incongruence fuels the entry and support of new parties
AU - Van De Wardt, Marc
AU - Otjes, Simon
N1 - Funding Information:
This research was supported by postdoctoral research grants from the Research Foundation Flanders ‘FWO’ (Grant number: FWO16/PDO/198) and the Fund for Scientific Research (F.R.S.‐FNRS) (Grant number: 28091302). We would like to thank Raimondas Ibenskas, Zach Warner, the participants in the GASPAR seminary and ECPR General Conference 2018 panel ‘The study of party entry and exit in old and new democracies’ and the two anonymous reviewers for their insightful comments. We thank Sigrid van Trappen for her excellent research assistance.
Funding Information:
Our dependent variable in this study, , varies by elections and counts the number of parties contesting lower house elections for the very first time (Cox 1997 ; Tavits 2006 ). Our new dataset provides the most comprehensive attempt, thus far, to include each new party. Extant work on party entry either employs a threshold (Tavits 2008 : 123), endeavours to include any new party but reports difficulties in finding all of them (Hug 2001 ; Tavits 2006 : 116), or explicitly confines itself to viable new parties (Bolleyer & Bytzek 2013 : 774; Lago & Martínez 2011 : 13). This new dataset was collected by the first author as part of his ‘Survival of the Fittest. Party entry and exit in Western Europe’ project funded by FWO and F.R.S.‐FNRS. It contains information (e.g., name, vote share, type of entry, party family) on all the parties that contested the postwar elections in all Western European countries. Information was collected from a wide range of sources including reference books on elections (Nohlen & Strover 2010 ), extant databases such as ParlGov (Döring & Manow 2015 ), online resources and national election authorities. We include entrants regardless of the number of electoral districts they contested. Yet, in our analyses we control for party system nationalisation to consider that in systems with greater regional diversity, entry counts can be inflated due to the large number of new parties entering only in one or very few districts. Party Entry
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 The Authors. European Journal of Political Research published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of European Consortium for Political Research
PY - 2022/2
Y1 - 2022/2
N2 - This article examines to what extent ideological incongruence (i.e., mismatch between policy positions of voters and parties) increases the entry of new parties in national parliamentary elections and their individual-level electoral support. Current empirical research on party entry and new party support either neglects the role of party–voter incongruence, or it only examines its effect on the entry and support of specific new parties or party families. This article fills this lacuna. Based on spatial theory, we hypothesise that parties are more likely to enter when ideological incongruence between voters and parties is higher (Study 1) and that voters are more likely to vote for new parties if these stand closer to them than established parties (Study 2). Together our two studies span 17 countries between 1996 and 2016. Time-series analyses support both hypotheses. This has important implications for spatial models of elections and empirical research on party entry and new party support.
AB - This article examines to what extent ideological incongruence (i.e., mismatch between policy positions of voters and parties) increases the entry of new parties in national parliamentary elections and their individual-level electoral support. Current empirical research on party entry and new party support either neglects the role of party–voter incongruence, or it only examines its effect on the entry and support of specific new parties or party families. This article fills this lacuna. Based on spatial theory, we hypothesise that parties are more likely to enter when ideological incongruence between voters and parties is higher (Study 1) and that voters are more likely to vote for new parties if these stand closer to them than established parties (Study 2). Together our two studies span 17 countries between 1996 and 2016. Time-series analyses support both hypotheses. This has important implications for spatial models of elections and empirical research on party entry and new party support.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85103416770
U2 - 10.1111/1475-6765.12445
DO - 10.1111/1475-6765.12445
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85103416770
SN - 0304-4130
VL - 61
SP - 194
EP - 213
JO - European Journal of Political Research
JF - European Journal of Political Research
IS - 1
ER -