Do political parties respond to shifts in the preferences of their supporters, which we label the partisan constituency model, or to shifts in the mean voter position (the general electorate model)? Cross-national analyses — based on observations from Eurobarometer surveys and parties’ policy programmes in 15 countries from 1973 to 2002 — suggest that the general electorate model characterizes the policy shifts of mainstream parties. Alternatively, when we analyse the policy shifts of Communist, Green and extreme Nationalist parties (i.e. ‘niche’ parties), we find that these parties respond to shifts in the mean position of their supporters. The findings have implications for spatial theories and political representation.
%0 Journal Article
%1 ezrow2011voter
%A Ezrow, Lawrence
%A De Vries, Catherine
%A Steenbergen, Marco
%A Edwards, Erica
%D 2011
%J Party Politics
%K 2011 EB_input2016 Eurobarometer FDZ_IUP SCOPUSindexed SSCIindexed article checked english fdz_jb indexproved input2016 review_proved reviewed
%N 3
%P 275-301
%R 10.1177/1354068810372100
%T Mean voter representation and partisan constituency representation: Do parties respond to the mean voter position or to their supporters?
%U http://ppq.sagepub.com/content/17/3/275.abstract
%V 17
%X Do political parties respond to shifts in the preferences of their supporters, which we label the partisan constituency model, or to shifts in the mean voter position (the general electorate model)? Cross-national analyses — based on observations from Eurobarometer surveys and parties’ policy programmes in 15 countries from 1973 to 2002 — suggest that the general electorate model characterizes the policy shifts of mainstream parties. Alternatively, when we analyse the policy shifts of Communist, Green and extreme Nationalist parties (i.e. ‘niche’ parties), we find that these parties respond to shifts in the mean position of their supporters. The findings have implications for spatial theories and political representation.
@article{ezrow2011voter,
abstract = {Do political parties respond to shifts in the preferences of their supporters, which we label the partisan constituency model, or to shifts in the mean voter position (the general electorate model)? Cross-national analyses — based on observations from Eurobarometer surveys and parties’ policy programmes in 15 countries from 1973 to 2002 — suggest that the general electorate model characterizes the policy shifts of mainstream parties. Alternatively, when we analyse the policy shifts of Communist, Green and extreme Nationalist parties (i.e. ‘niche’ parties), we find that these parties respond to shifts in the mean position of their supporters. The findings have implications for spatial theories and political representation.},
added-at = {2019-03-20T18:49:19.000+0100},
author = {Ezrow, Lawrence and De Vries, Catherine and Steenbergen, Marco and Edwards, Erica},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/27f3c2f62276bf9637b401283e9867b4c/gesis_dump},
doi = {10.1177/1354068810372100},
eprint = {http://ppq.sagepub.com/content/17/3/275.full.pdf+html},
interhash = {dfe09d18e5aa4773390e86cc699ae565},
intrahash = {7f3c2f62276bf9637b401283e9867b4c},
journal = {Party Politics},
keywords = {2011 EB_input2016 Eurobarometer FDZ_IUP SCOPUSindexed SSCIindexed article checked english fdz_jb indexproved input2016 review_proved reviewed},
note = {First published online: July 29,2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1354068810372100. (Eurobarometer)},
number = 3,
pages = {275-301},
tagadata-svko-dda-test = {10813},
tagadata-svkoddatest2 = {10806},
timestamp = {2019-10-01T13:01:25.000+0200},
title = {Mean voter representation and partisan constituency representation: Do parties respond to the mean voter position or to their supporters?},
url = {http://ppq.sagepub.com/content/17/3/275.abstract},
volume = 17,
year = 2011
}