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Why Parties Gain Votes When the Public Perceives Them Shifting to the Right
[journal article]
Abstract We combine two dominant approaches to studying how issues influence elections: one that emphasizes parties' issue positions, and the other parties’ issue ownership. Research from the latter approach shows that voters ascribe greater economic competence to right-wing parties. Based on this finding, w... view more
We combine two dominant approaches to studying how issues influence elections: one that emphasizes parties' issue positions, and the other parties’ issue ownership. Research from the latter approach shows that voters ascribe greater economic competence to right-wing parties. Based on this finding, we argue that parties enhance their economic issue ownership when voters perceive them shifting to the right. In the following step, we show that perceived rightward shifts of parties also lead to subsequent increases in electoral support. We analyze economic ownership survey data and election outcomes in 15 democracies over the period 1986-2015 that supports the expectations that parties' perceived rightward shifts result in increases in economic ownership and subsequent vote shares. We also show that the right-shift vote gains are strongest during recessions when voters prioritize parties’ economic competence.... view less
Keywords
representation; party; voting behavior; party politics; political right; international comparison
Classification
Political Process, Elections, Political Sociology, Political Culture
Free Keywords
political representation; issue ownership; party policy positions; Comparative Study of Electoral Systems (CSES)
Document language
English
Publication Year
2024
Page/Pages
p. 1203-1222
Journal
Political Studies, 72 (2024) 3
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/00323217231178979
ISSN
1467-9248
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed