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ID105705
Title ProperKeeping the rascals in
Other Title Informationanti-political-establishment parties and their cost of governing in established democracies
LanguageENG
AuthorSpanje, Joost Van
Publication2011.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Coalition governments in established democracies incur, on average, an electoral 'cost of governing'. This cost varies across coalition partners, and is higher for anti-political-establishment parties. This is because, if such a party participates in a coalition, it loses the purity of its message by being seen to cooperate with the political establishment. In order to demonstrate that anti-political-establishment parties suffer an additional cost of governing, this article builds on the work by Van der Brug et al. and refines the standard cost of governing theory by 'bringing the party back in'. The results of the analyses, based on 594 observations concerning 51 parties in seven Western European countries, cast doubt on the conventional concept of a cost of governing that pertains to all parties equally. The findings call for a major revision of the standard cost of governing literature, while adding a significant contribution to the debate on strategies against parties that may constitute a danger to democracy.
`In' analytical NoteEuropean Journal of Political Research Vol. 50, No. 5; Aug 2011: p609-635
Journal SourceEuropean Journal of Political Research Vol. 50, No. 5; Aug 2011: p609-635
Key WordsFar Right Parties ;  Communist Parties ;  Elections ;  Government ;  Western Europe