Journal article

Party competition in a heterogeneous electorate: The role of dominant-issue voters


Authors listBischoff, I

Publication year2005

Pages221-243

JournalPublic Choice

Volume number122

Issue number1-2

ISSN0048-5829

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1007/s11127-005-5804-2

PublisherSpringer


Abstract
This paper provides a theoretical model of party competition in a heterogeneous electorate. The latter consists of numerous groups of dominant-issue-voters who base their voting decision primarily on one issue of the political agenda. Parties follow a lexicographic objective function, aiming to gain power at minimum programmatic concessions. The emerging pattern of movement in policy platforms is fundamentally different to the concept of convergence proposed by the spatial theory of voting. Rather than the centre of the scale of policy preference, its extreme ends, occupied by dominant-issue-voters, attract the policy platforms. The difference in policy platforms is not reduced. The conclusions are found to be compatible with some major empirical findings of the Manifesto Research Group.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleBischoff, I. (2005) Party competition in a heterogeneous electorate: The role of dominant-issue voters, Public Choice, 122(1-2), pp. 221-243. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11127-005-5804-2

APA Citation styleBischoff, I. (2005). Party competition in a heterogeneous electorate: The role of dominant-issue voters. Public Choice. 122(1-2), 221-243. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11127-005-5804-2



Keywords


ECONOMIC-THEORYIDEOLOGYINTERESTSPOLITICAL-PARTIESPUBLIC-POLICYVOTING MODELS

Last updated on 2025-02-04 at 07:16