ID | 111506 |
Title Proper | Do voters reward rebellion? the electoral accountability of MPs in Britain |
Language | ENG |
Author | Vivyan, Nick ; Wagner, Markus |
Publication | 2012. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | To hold their Members of Parliament individually accountable for their legislative behaviour, British voters would need to base their decision to vote for an MP at least partially on the extent to which the MP's legislative voting behaviour deviated from that of the MP's party leadership. Voters should evaluate this deviation contingent on their views of the party leadership. MP rebellion can signal that voter-MP congruence is greater than that of the voter and the MP's party leadership. In this article it is found that only constituents with negative attitudes toward the Labour government reward rebellious Labour MPs, albeit to a limited extent. A similar conditional association is not observed on a single issue: Iraq. The policy accountability of MPs is relatively weak and general rather than issue-specific. |
`In' analytical Note | European Journal of Political Research Vol. 51, No.2; Mar 2012: p.235-264 |
Journal Source | European Journal of Political Research Vol. 51, No.2; Mar 2012: p.235-264 |
Key Words | Accountability ; British Politics ; Legislative Behaviour ; Single - Member Districts ; Voting Behaviour |