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Volumn 39, Issue 4, 2009, Pages 825-846

Policy adjustment by parties in response to rival parties policy shifts: Spatial theory and the dynamics of party competition in twenty-five post-war democracies

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EID: 77049117346     PISSN: 00071234     EISSN: 14692112     Source Type: Journal    
DOI: 10.1017/S0007123409000635     Document Type: Article
Times cited : (210)

References (81)
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    • For empirical applications of spatial modelling see Ian Budge, 'A New Theory of Party Competition: Uncertainty, Ideology, and Policy Equilibria Viewed Comparatively and Temporally', British Journal of Political Science, 24 (1994), 443-67;
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    • We note that this hypothesis is also implied by spatial models of policy-seeking parties, i.e. parties that seek office in order to implement their preferred policies. Policy-seeking parties' strategic imperative to win office, which is necessary in order to implement their pre-election policy promises, motivates them to calibrate their strategies against the position of the median voter although policy-seeking parties do not typically converge to the median, provided there is uncertainty about the election outcome, so that they can be expected to update their policy strategies when the median voter's position shifts
    • We note that this hypothesis is also implied by spatial models of policy-seeking parties, i.e. parties that seek office in order to implement their preferred policies. Policy-seeking parties' strategic imperative to win office - which is necessary in order to implement their pre-election policy promises - motivates them to calibrate their strategies against the position of the median voter (although policy-seeking parties do not typically converge to the median, provided there is uncertainty about the election outcome), so that they can be expected to update their policy strategies when the median voter's position shifts.
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    • On these points, see Donald Wittman, 'Spatial Strategies When Candidates Have Policy Preferences,' in James Enelow and Melvin Hinich, eds, Advances in the Spatial Theory of Voting (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1990), pp. 66-98.
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    • On American politics, see, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
    • On American politics, see Robert Erikson, Michael MacKuen and James Stimson, The Macro Polity (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002).
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    • Erikson, R.1    MacKuen, M.2    Stimson, J.3
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    • Understanding Change and Stability in Party Ideologies: Do Parties Respond to Public Opinion or to Past Election Results?
    • On European politics, see
    • On European politics, see James Adams, Michael Clark, Lawrence Ezrow and Garrett Glasgow, 'Understanding Change and Stability in Party Ideologies: Do Parties Respond to Public Opinion or to Past Election Results?' British Journal of Political Science, 34 (2004), 589-610;
    • (2004) British Journal of Political Science , vol.34 , pp. 589-610
    • Adams, J.1    Clark, M.2    Ezrow, L.3    Glasgow, G.4
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    • also Lawrence Ezrow, 'The Variance Matters: How Party Systems Represent the Preferences of Voters'
    • also Lawrence Ezrow, 'The Variance Matters: How Party Systems Represent the Preferences of Voters', Journal of Politics, 69 (2007), 182-92.
    • (2007) Journal of Politics , vol.69 , pp. 182-192
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    • A Comparative Spatial Analysis of Majoritarian and Proportional Elections
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    • See, e.g., Jay K. Dow, 'A Comparative Spatial Analysis of Majoritarian and Proportional Elections', Electoral Studies, 20 (2001), 109-25;
    • (2001) Electoral Studies , vol.20 , pp. 109-125
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    • Competition between Unequals: The Role of Mainstream Party Strategy and Niche Party Success
    • Bonnie Meguid,'Competition between Unequals: The Role of Mainstream Party Strategy and Niche Party Success', American Political Science Review, 99 (2005), 347-60;
    • (2005) American Political Science Review , vol.99 , pp. 347-360
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    • 77049122141 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • If the parties' positions diverge in a two-party, unidimensional spatial model with deterministic policy voting and full voter turnout, then either party can enhance its support by unilaterally shifting its position in the direction of the rival party
    • If the parties' positions diverge in a two-party, unidimensional spatial model with deterministic policy voting and full voter turnout, then either party can enhance its support by unilaterally shifting its position in the direction of the rival party.
  • 18
    • 77049100102 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • James Adams, Party Competition and Responsible Party Government: A Theory of Spatial Competition Based Upon Insights from Behavioral Voting Research Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2001, On pp. 55-61 of this book Adams, using a spatial model where voters are motivated by a combination of policy distance and party identification, presents illustrative arguments that when moderate parties shift to the left, for instance, then this depresses left-wing parties' prospects of competing successfully for support from centre-left voters, and that these leftist parties therefore have electoral incentives to shift their own positions farther to the left, in the direction of their core partisan constituencies. Adams also presents arguments that this scenario provides right-wing parties with electoral incentives to shift in a leftward direction
    • James Adams, Party Competition and Responsible Party Government: A Theory of Spatial Competition Based Upon Insights from Behavioral Voting Research (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2001). On pp. 55-61 of this book Adams, using a spatial model where voters are motivated by a combination of policy distance and party identification, presents illustrative arguments that when moderate parties shift to the left, for instance, then this depresses left-wing parties' prospects of competing successfully for support from centre-left voters, and that these leftist parties therefore have electoral incentives to shift their own positions farther to the left, in the direction of their core partisan constituencies. Adams also presents arguments that this scenario provides right-wing parties with electoral incentives to shift in a leftward direction.
  • 19
    • 33750217483 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Why Small, Centrist Third Parties Motivate Policy Divergence by Major Parties
    • James Adams and Samuel Merrill III, 'Why Small, Centrist Third Parties Motivate Policy Divergence by Major Parties', American Political Science Review, 100 (2006), 403-17;
    • (2006) American Political Science Review , vol.100 , pp. 403-417
    • Adams, J.1    Merrill III, S.2
  • 20
    • 67749104761 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Policy-Seeking Parties in a Parliamentary Democracy with Proportional Representation: A Valence-Uncertainty Model
    • forthcoming
    • James Adams and Samuel Merrill III, 'Policy-Seeking Parties in a Parliamentary Democracy with Proportional Representation: A Valence-Uncertainty Model', British Journal of Political Science, 39 (2009), forthcoming.
    • (2009) British Journal of Political Science , vol.39
    • Adams, J.1    Merrill III, S.2
  • 21
    • 77049116841 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • For instance, in a unidimensional spatial model with deterministic policy voting, each party's supporters are located in the segment of the continuum that is bounded by two 'cut-points', that represent the midpoints between the party's position and the position of the adjacent party on its left and the adjacent party on its right (if the focal party is the right-most or left-most party in the system, then there is a single cut-point). In such unidimensional models, a party's vote share changes in response to marginal shifts by the adjacent parties along the continuum, but its vote share will not change in response to marginal shifts by other parties.
    • For instance, in a unidimensional spatial model with deterministic policy voting, each party's supporters are located in the segment of the continuum that is bounded by two 'cut-points', that represent the midpoints between the party's position and the position of the adjacent party on its left and the adjacent party on its right (if the focal party is the right-most or left-most party in the system, then there is a single cut-point). In such unidimensional models, a party's vote share changes in response to marginal shifts by the adjacent parties along the continuum, but its vote share will not change in response to marginal shifts by other parties.
  • 22
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    • The Principle of Minimum Differentiation Reconsidered: Some New Developments in the Theory of Spatial Competition
    • See, e.g
    • See, e.g., Curtis B. Eaton and Richard G. Lipsey, 'The Principle of Minimum Differentiation Reconsidered: Some New Developments in the Theory of Spatial Competition', Review of Economic Studies, 42 (1975), 27-49;
    • (1975) Review of Economic Studies , vol.42 , pp. 27-49
    • Eaton, C.B.1    Lipsey, R.G.2
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    • Centripetal and Centrifugal Incentives in Electoral Systems
    • Gary Cox, 'Centripetal and Centrifugal Incentives in Electoral Systems', American Journal of Political Science, 34 (1990), 905-35.
    • (1990) American Journal of Political Science , vol.34 , pp. 905-935
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    • A New Theory of Party Competition'; Michael Laver, 'Policy and the Dynamics of Political Competition'
    • Budge, 'A New Theory of Party Competition'; Michael Laver, 'Policy and the Dynamics of Political Competition', American Political Science Review, 99 (2005), 263-81.
    • (2005) American Political Science Review , vol.99 , pp. 263-281
    • Budge1
  • 25
    • 0004162268 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • For a more thorough description of the coding process, see Appendix 2 in Ian Budge, Hans-Dieter Klingemann, Andrea Volkens, Eric Tannenbaum and Judith Bara, Oxford: Oxford University Press
    • For a more thorough description of the coding process, see Appendix 2 in Ian Budge, Hans-Dieter Klingemann, Andrea Volkens, Eric Tannenbaum and Judith Bara, Mapping Policy Preferences: Estimates for Parties, Electors, and Governments 1945-1998 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001).
    • (2001) Mapping Policy Preferences: Estimates for Parties, Electors, and Governments 1945-1998
  • 26
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    • Checking the Party Policy Estimates: Reliability
    • See, Budge et al, eds
    • See Derek Hearl, 'Checking the Party Policy Estimates: Reliability', in Budge et al., eds, Mapping Policy Preferences, pp. 111-25;
    • Mapping Policy Preferences , pp. 111-125
    • Hearl, D.1
  • 27
    • 7644233213 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Checking the Party Policy Estimates: Convergent Validity
    • Budge et al, eds
    • Michael McDonald and Sylvia Mendes, 'Checking the Party Policy Estimates: Convergent Validity', in Budge et al., eds, Mapping Policy Preferences, pp. 127-41;
    • Mapping Policy Preferences , pp. 127-141
    • McDonald, M.1    Mendes, S.2
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    • Extracting Policy Positions from Political Texts Using Words as Data
    • Michael Laver, Kenneth Benoit and John Garry, 'Extracting Policy Positions from Political Texts Using Words as Data', American Political Science Review, 97 (2003), 311-31.
    • (2003) American Political Science Review , vol.97 , pp. 311-331
    • Laver, M.1    Benoit, K.2    Garry, J.3
  • 29
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    • Are Niche Parties Fundamentally Different from Mainstream Parties? The Causes and the Electoral Consequences of Western European Parties' Policy Shifts, 1976-1998'
    • See
    • See James Adams, Michael Clark, Lawrence Ezrow and Garrett Glasgow, 'Are Niche Parties Fundamentally Different from Mainstream Parties? The Causes and the Electoral Consequences of Western European Parties' Policy Shifts, 1976-1998', American Journal of Political Science, 50 (2006), 513-29;
    • (2006) American Journal of Political Science , vol.50 , pp. 513-529
    • Adams, J.1    Clark, M.2    Ezrow, L.3    Glasgow, G.4
  • 32
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    • Extending Party Estimates to Governments and Electors
    • Budge et al, eds
    • Hee Min Kim and Richard Fording, 'Extending Party Estimates to Governments and Electors', in Budge et al., eds, Mapping Policy Preferences, pp. 157-77.
    • Mapping Policy Preferences , pp. 157-177
    • Min Kim, H.1    Fording, R.2
  • 33
    • 77049125574 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • See the latter citation for a detailed description of the Kim-Fording procedure for inferring the median voter position. The Kim-Fording estimates of the median voter position are included on the CD-ROM that accompanies Budge et al, eds, Mapping Policy Preferences
    • See the latter citation for a detailed description of the Kim-Fording procedure for inferring the median voter position. The Kim-Fording estimates of the median voter position are included on the CD-ROM that accompanies Budge et al., eds, Mapping Policy Preferences.
  • 34
    • 77049094269 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • McDonald and Budge, Elections, Parties, Democracy.
    • McDonald and Budge, Elections, Parties, Democracy.
  • 35
    • 77049094974 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • There exist several cross-national, survey-based, public opinion instruments - such as the World Values Study surveys and the Eurobarometer surveys - but these measures do not extend back before the mid 1970s, nor do they encompass the full set of twenty-five democracies included in our study. However, below we report sensitivity analyses on sub-sets of the cases in our dataset, for which survey-based public opinion measures are available.
    • There exist several cross-national, survey-based, public opinion instruments - such as the World Values Study surveys and the Eurobarometer surveys - but these measures do not extend back before the mid 1970s, nor do they encompass the full set of twenty-five democracies included in our study. However, below we report sensitivity analyses on sub-sets of the cases in our dataset, for which survey-based public opinion measures are available.
  • 36
    • 77049123274 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • See pp. 199-202 in McDonald and Budge, Elections, Parties, Democracy.
    • See pp. 199-202 in McDonald and Budge, Elections, Parties, Democracy.
  • 37
    • 77049118788 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Specifically, in order to estimate the coefficients of the model depicted in Figure 1, we would need to specify certain exogenous variables as 'instrumental variables', i.e. as measured variables that influenced one party's policy positions but not the other party's positions. Our substantive conclusions would then depend entirely on these strong assumptions. Furthermore, from a practical standpoint, even to the extent that we are prepared to employ the instrumental variables approach, there are no plausible instrumental variables that we can measure continuously over the large set of political parties (193 in all) and the long time period (1945-1998) of our study.
    • Specifically, in order to estimate the coefficients of the model depicted in Figure 1, we would need to specify certain exogenous variables as 'instrumental variables', i.e. as measured variables that influenced one party's policy positions but not the other party's positions. Our substantive conclusions would then depend entirely on these strong assumptions. Furthermore, from a practical standpoint, even to the extent that we are prepared to employ the instrumental variables approach, there are no plausible instrumental variables that we can measure continuously over the large set of political parties (193 in all) and the long time period (1945-1998) of our study.
  • 39
    • 84971758042 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • We thank an anonymous referee for suggesting this argument on why parties may be expected to lag in their responses to outside conditions and events. In addition, we note that there are some spatially- based perspectives that admit the possibility of lagged party responses. The most obvious example is Budge's approach to modelling party competition under conditions of radical uncertainty (Budge, A New Theory of Party Competition, However, it strikes us that the agent-based modelling approach of Laver, Policy and the Dynamics of Political Competition, also incorporates the possibility of lags in parties' responses to rival parties' strategies. In Laver's specification voters respond to the parties' current policy positions but the parties themselves respond to their competitors' policy strategies from the previous time period (see also Kenneth Kollman, John Miller and Scott Page, Adaptive Parties in Spatial Elections, American Political Science Review, 86 1992, 929-37
    • We thank an anonymous referee for suggesting this argument on why parties may be expected to lag in their responses to outside conditions and events. In addition, we note that there are some spatially- based perspectives that admit the possibility of lagged party responses. The most obvious example is Budge's approach to modelling party competition under conditions of radical uncertainty (Budge, 'A New Theory of Party Competition'). However, it strikes us that the agent-based modelling approach of Laver ('Policy and the Dynamics of Political Competition') also incorporates the possibility of lags in parties' responses to rival parties' strategies. In Laver's specification voters respond to the parties' current policy positions but the parties themselves respond to their competitors' policy strategies from the previous time period (see also Kenneth Kollman, John Miller and Scott Page, 'Adaptive Parties in Spatial Elections', American Political Science Review, 86 (1992), 929-37). This approach appears compatible with the perspective we present here.
  • 40
    • 77049097463 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Below we report sensitivity analyses which suggest that our substantive conclusions on how parties respond to the competitors' previous policy shifts extend to alternative specifications, which control for factors related to rival parties' current shifts
    • Below we report sensitivity analyses which suggest that our substantive conclusions on how parties respond to the competitors' previous policy shifts extend to alternative specifications, which control for factors related to rival parties' current shifts.
  • 41
    • 77049100099 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Note that because the focal party's position is excluded from this computation, the variable [average shift, other parties (t- 1, can take on different values with respect to different parties competing in the same election. Suppose, for instance, that an election at time t involves three parties A, B and C, and that these parties' observed left-right shifts between election t, 2 and election t, 1 were, 2 for Party A, 0 for Party B, and 14 for Party C. Then the value of the [average shift, other parties (t- 1, variable with respect to Party A is the average of the previous shifts of parties B and C, which equals (0, 4)/2, 2; the value of this variable with respect to Party B is the average of the previous shifts of parties A and C, which equals, 2, 4)/2, 1;
    • Note that because the focal party's position is excluded from this computation, the variable [average shift - other parties (t- 1)] can take on different values with respect to different parties competing in the same election. Suppose, for instance, that an election at time t involves three parties A, B and C, and that these parties' observed left-right shifts between election t - 2 and election t - 1 were - 2 for Party A, 0 for Party B, and 14 for Party C. Then the value of the [average shift - other parties (t- 1)] variable with respect to Party A is the average of the previous shifts of parties B and C, which equals (0 + 4)/2 =+ 2; the value of this variable with respect to Party B is the average of the previous shifts of parties A and C, which equals (-2 + 4)/2 =+1;
  • 42
    • 77049088543 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • and the value of this variable with respect to Party C is the average of the previous shifts of parties A and B, which equals (-2 + 0)/2 =- 1.
    • and the value of this variable with respect to Party C is the average of the previous shifts of parties A and B, which equals (-2 + 0)/2 =- 1.
  • 43
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    • Stimson, Erikson and Mackuen, The Macro Polity; Adams et al., 'Understanding Change and Stability in Party Ideologies'; McDonald and Budge, Voters, Parties, Elections.
    • Stimson, Erikson and Mackuen, The Macro Polity; Adams et al., 'Understanding Change and Stability in Party Ideologies'; McDonald and Budge, Voters, Parties, Elections.
  • 44
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    • Budge ('A New Theory of Party Competition'), who argues that party elites may pursue this strategy of 'policy alternation' because they recognize the need to satisfy both the moderate and the radical wings of their parties, finds empirical support for the alternation hypothesis in his analysis of CMP data from twenty post-war democracies. Adams, in Party Competition and Responsible Party Government, develops a spatial model in which voters are moved by a combination of policy distance and non-policy considerations, and concludes that voters' non policy-related attachments (such as party identification) can give political parties electoral incentives to shift their policies back and forth over time, thereby creating a pattern that resembles Budge's alternation model.
    • Budge ('A New Theory of Party Competition'), who argues that party elites may pursue this strategy of 'policy alternation' because they recognize the need to satisfy both the moderate and the radical wings of their parties, finds empirical support for the alternation hypothesis in his analysis of CMP data from twenty post-war democracies. Adams, in Party Competition and Responsible Party Government, develops a spatial model in which voters are moved by a combination of policy distance and non-policy considerations, and concludes that voters' non policy-related attachments (such as party identification) can give political parties electoral incentives to shift their policies back and forth over time, thereby creating a pattern that resembles Budge's alternation model.
  • 46
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    • We note that we also controlled for party membership in the family of centrist parties, which we defined as those parties that the CMP classified as belonging to the Liberal family. However, because very few of the party systems in our study featured multiple members of the Liberal family, we did not include this variable in our empirical specification
    • We note that we also controlled for party membership in the family of centrist parties, which we defined as those parties that the CMP classified as belonging to the Liberal family. However, because very few of the party systems in our study featured multiple members of the Liberal family, we did not include this variable in our empirical specification.
  • 47
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    • 5)].
    • 5)].
  • 48
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    • We required at least three consecutive party programme codings in order to construct the [party shift (t)] variable and the [party shift (t - 1)] variable that we include in our empirical specifications.
    • We required at least three consecutive party programme codings in order to construct the [party shift (t)] variable and the [party shift (t - 1)] variable that we include in our empirical specifications.
  • 49
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    • See Cheng Hsiao, Analysis of Panel Data, 2nd edn (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003); and Donald P. Green, Soo Yeon Kim, and David H. Yoon, 'Dirty Pool', International Organization, 55 (2001), 441-68.
    • See Cheng Hsiao, Analysis of Panel Data, 2nd edn (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003); and Donald P. Green, Soo Yeon Kim, and David H. Yoon, 'Dirty Pool', International Organization, 55 (2001), 441-68.
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    • What to Do (and Not to Do) with Time- Series Cross-Section Data
    • On this point, see
    • On this point, see Nathaniel Beck and Jonathan N. Katz, 'What to Do (and Not to Do) with Time- Series Cross-Section Data', American Political Science Review, 89 (1995), 634-47.
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    • See William H. Rogers, 'Regression Standard Errors in Clustered Samples', Stata Technical Bulletin, 13 (1993), 19-23;
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    • A New Theory of Party Competition
    • al, Understanding Change and Stability in Party Ideologies
    • Budge, 'A New Theory of Party Competition'; Adams et al., 'Understanding Change and Stability in Party Ideologies'.
    • Adams et
    • Budge1
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    • We thank three anonymous referees and the Editor for suggesting many of the sensitivity analyses that we report in this section. The results of all of these sensitivity analyses are available from the authors upon request
    • We thank three anonymous referees and the Editor for suggesting many of the sensitivity analyses that we report in this section. The results of all of these sensitivity analyses are available from the authors upon request.
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    • Party Position or Party Direction? An Analysis of Party Manifesto Data
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    • For all twenty-five sets of parameter estimates on the Fully Specified Model, the estimated coefficient on the [average shift - other parties (t- 1)] variable was positive and statistically significant at the 0.05 level. For twenty of the twenty-five estimates, the estimated coefficient on the [average shift - family members (t- 1)] variable was positive and statistically significant at the 0.05 level, and in four of the remaining five cases this estimate was positive and statistically significant at the 0.10 level.
    • For all twenty-five sets of parameter estimates on the Fully Specified Model, the estimated coefficient on the [average shift - other parties (t- 1)] variable was positive and statistically significant at the 0.05 level. For twenty of the twenty-five estimates, the estimated coefficient on the [average shift - family members (t- 1)] variable was positive and statistically significant at the 0.05 level, and in four of the remaining five cases this estimate was positive and statistically significant at the 0.10 level.
  • 59
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    • Studies on the effect of global economic variables on parties' policy positions include Andrea Haupt, 'Globalization's Effects on Parties' Economic Policy Positions'
    • forthcoming;
    • Studies on the effect of global economic variables on parties' policy positions include Andrea Haupt, 'Globalization's Effects on Parties' Economic Policy Positions', Party Politics, forthcoming;
    • Party Politics
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    • What Moves Parties? The Role of Public Opinion and Global Economic Conditions in Western Europe
    • forthcoming;
    • James Adams, Andrea Haupt and Heather Stoll, 'What Moves Parties? The Role of Public Opinion and Global Economic Conditions in Western Europe', Comparative Political Studies, forthcoming;
    • Comparative Political Studies
    • Adams, J.1    Haupt, A.2    Stoll, H.3
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    • For analyses of the effects of the voting system on party positioning, see, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
    • For analyses of the effects of the voting system on party positioning, see Gary Cox, Making Votes Count (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997);
    • (1997) Making Votes Count
    • Cox, G.1
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    • Parties' Policy Programmes and the Dog that Didn't Bark: No Evidence that Proportional Systems Promote Extreme Party Positioning'
    • Lawrence Ezrow, 'Parties' Policy Programmes and the Dog that Didn't Bark: No Evidence that Proportional Systems Promote Extreme Party Positioning', British Journal of Political Science, 38 (2008), 470-98;
    • (2008) British Journal of Political Science , vol.38 , pp. 470-498
    • Ezrow, L.1
  • 65
    • 84970315639 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Specifically, we re-estimated our specifications while excluding parties that the CMP classified as belonging to the Ecology, Nationalist, Agrarian, Ethnic/Regional and 'Special Interest' party families, i.e. parties that emphasize issues that do not necessarily map onto the left-right economic dimension. We also conducted additional analyses where we further restricted our focus to the sub-set of party systems in our dataset that previous studies, conducted by Laver and Benoit and by Huber and Inglehart, identify as revolving primarily around issues that map onto the left-right dimension. These analyses again supported our substantive conclusions. See John Huber and Ronald Inglehart, Expert Interpretations of Party Space and Party Locations in 42 Societies, Party Politics, 1 1995, 73-111;
    • Specifically, we re-estimated our specifications while excluding parties that the CMP classified as belonging to the Ecology, Nationalist, Agrarian, Ethnic/Regional and 'Special Interest' party families, i.e. parties that emphasize issues that do not necessarily map onto the left-right economic dimension. We also conducted additional analyses where we further restricted our focus to the sub-set of party systems in our dataset that previous studies, conducted by Laver and Benoit and by Huber and Inglehart, identify as revolving primarily around issues that map onto the left-right dimension. These analyses again supported our substantive conclusions. See John Huber and Ronald Inglehart, 'Expert Interpretations of Party Space and Party Locations in 42 Societies', Party Politics, 1 (1995), 73-111;
  • 67
    • 77049093055 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Budge, 'A New Theory of Party Competition'. See also Jack Nagel, 'Center-Party Strength and Major-Party Polarization in Britain', presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association, San Francisco, 2001.
    • Budge, 'A New Theory of Party Competition'. See also Jack Nagel, 'Center-Party Strength and Major-Party Polarization in Britain', presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association, San Francisco, 2001.
  • 69
    • 77049123514 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Specifically, the estimated coefficient on the [public opinion shift (t)] variable in column 4, 0.511, implies that, ceterus paribus, mainstream parties shift their policies by 0.511 units in response to a one-unit shift in public opinion. The estimated coefficient on the [public opinion shift (t) × niche party] variable, -0.208, is statistically significant (p < 0.01, two-tailed test) and implies that niche parties shift their policies by only (0.511 - 0.208) = 0.303 units in response to a one-unit public opinion shift.
    • Specifically, the estimated coefficient on the [public opinion shift (t)] variable in column 4, 0.511, implies that, ceterus paribus, mainstream parties shift their policies by 0.511 units in response to a one-unit shift in public opinion. The estimated coefficient on the [public opinion shift (t) × niche party] variable, -0.208, is statistically significant (p < 0.01, two-tailed test) and implies that niche parties shift their policies by only (0.511 - 0.208) = 0.303 units in response to a one-unit public opinion shift.
  • 74
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    • The policy preferences of a party's electoral constituency can change either due to changes in the constituency's composition, i.e. due to exit/entry by some members of the party constituency, or as a result of shifts in the policy preferences in the existing constituency, i.e. the composition of the party's electoral constituency is constant but some members of this constituency shift their opinions. Laver's analyses focus on the consequences of compositional changes in parties' electoral constituencies. We note that McGann's equilibrium analysis of aggregating parties in multiparty elections suggests similar substantive conclusions (see Anthony McGann, The Advantages of Ideological Cohesion: A Model of Constituency Representation and Electoral Competition in Multiparty Democracies, Journal of Theoretical Politics, 14 2002, 37-70
    • The policy preferences of a party's electoral constituency can change either due to changes in the constituency's composition - i.e. due to exit/entry by some members of the party constituency - or as a result of shifts in the policy preferences in the existing constituency, i.e. the composition of the party's electoral constituency is constant but some members of this constituency shift their opinions. Laver's analyses focus on the consequences of compositional changes in parties' electoral constituencies. We note that McGann's equilibrium analysis of aggregating parties in multiparty elections suggests similar substantive conclusions (see Anthony McGann, 'The Advantages of Ideological Cohesion: A Model of Constituency Representation and Electoral Competition in Multiparty Democracies', Journal of Theoretical Politics, 14 (2002), 37-70).
  • 75
    • 77049117605 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • The Variance Matters'; Ronni Abney, Andrea Morrison and Gary Stradiotto, On the Stability of Representation: A Cross-National Study of the Dispersion of Parties' Policy Positions in Plurality and Proportional Representation Systems'
    • Ezrow, The Variance Matters'; Ronni Abney, Andrea Morrison and Gary Stradiotto, On the Stability of Representation: A Cross-National Study of the Dispersion of Parties' Policy Positions in Plurality and Proportional Representation Systems', Representation, 43 (2007), 151-65.
    • (2007) Representation , vol.43 , pp. 151-165
    • Ezrow1
  • 76
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    • We note that these empirical studies focus primarily on parties' positions on the overarching left-right dimension, so that they do not necessarily address the diversity of parties' policy positions along emerging, cross-cutting, cleavages such as European integration or globalization. For multidimensional analyses that address these points, see Josephine Andrews and Jeannette Money, 'The Spatial Structure of Party Competition: Party Dispersion within a Finite Policy Space', unpublished, University of California - Davis.
    • We note that these empirical studies focus primarily on parties' positions on the overarching left-right dimension, so that they do not necessarily address the diversity of parties' policy positions along emerging, cross-cutting, cleavages such as European integration or globalization. For multidimensional analyses that address these points, see Josephine Andrews and Jeannette Money, 'The Spatial Structure of Party Competition: Party Dispersion within a Finite Policy Space', unpublished, University of California - Davis.
  • 77
    • 33845992504 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Principle versus Pragmatism: Policy Shifts and Political Competition
    • On these points, see
    • On these points, see Margit Tavits, 'Principle versus Pragmatism: Policy Shifts and Political Competition', American Journal of Political Science, 51 (2007), 151-65;
    • (2007) American Journal of Political Science , vol.51 , pp. 151-165
    • Tavits, M.1
  • 78
    • 77049096107 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • and Andrews and Money, 'The Spatial Structure of Party Competition'.
    • and Andrews and Money, 'The Spatial Structure of Party Competition'.
  • 80
    • 31044439170 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Party System Change: Testing a Model of New Party Entry
    • and Margit Tavits, 'Party System Change: Testing a Model of New Party Entry', Party Politics, 12 (2006), 99-119.
    • (2006) Party Politics , vol.12 , pp. 99-119
    • Tavits, M.1
  • 81
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    • On this point see Money and Andrews, 'Parties' Electoral Strategies'.
    • On this point see Money and Andrews, 'Parties' Electoral Strategies'.


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