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@article{ Nedelescu2015,
 title = {Voting in National and European Parliamentary
Elections: What Determines the Turnout Gap?},
 author = {Nedelescu, Roxana},
 journal = {Studia Politica: Romanian Political Science Review},
 number = {3},
 pages = {367-403},
 volume = {15},
 year = {2015},
 issn = {1582-4551},
 urn = {https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-51524-9},
 abstract = {The European Parliament is the only source of direct legitimacy of the
European Union, as it is the only body directly elected by the citizens. Politics within the European Parliament has increasingly grown in
importance, as its powers expanded progressively with each European
Union treaty. The opposite happened with voter turnout. This paper
builds on the idea that the European elections are perceived as less
important by the voters’ parties and the media, and are in general
characterized by a lower electoral participation with respect to National
elections. We analyze turnout from two perspectives: individual and
aggregate level. Individual electoral models are estimated using data
from the European Social Survey and Standard Eurobarometer Survey,
referring at electoral turnout at National and Supranational level,
respectively. From an individual level perspective, we test if unequal
participation exists concerning socioeconomic categories across “firstorder”
National elections and “second-order” European elections in
order to understand if a potential representation bias might exist.
Empirical evidence highlights that inequality in participation exists only
for the European Parliament elections. From the aggregate level side, an
original panel data is used in order to understand the turnout gap across
elections and test the “second-order” theory concerning the European
Parliament elections as an opportunity to contest governing parties.
Evidence shows that a vote share gap across the two election types
exists, and that large as well as extremist and parties from European
Monetary Union Member States lose votes across elections. Being an
EMU member as well as being a net-payer at the European Union
budget increases the electoral gap.},
 keywords = {Europaparlament; European Parliament; Legitimität; legitimacy; Europawahl; election to the European Parliament; Wahlbeteiligung; voter turnout; Wahlverhalten; voting behavior; Wahlergebnis; election result}}