2019-04-25T08:47:29Z
2019-04-25T08:47:29Z
2017-08-29
2019-04-25T08:47:29Z
Recent studies of coalition-directed voting suggest that what political parties say during a campaign can influence voter perceptions of the likelihood of certain coalitions and that this, in turn, may foster strategic voting in multiparty systems. Here, we expand this argument, and show that pre-election coalition signals also have the potential to influence voter perceptions of the parties themselves. By revealing their coalition preferences, parties provide information on where they stand on the political continuum. We test our argument using a survey experiment run during a regional election campaign in Spain in which we manipulated the coalition signals emitted by two parties: one, a traditional, social-democratic party and, the second, a new, liberal party. Results show how coalition signals can significantly influence the party's position and, ultimately, affect voters' stated probability of voting, especially in the case of the recently founded party.
Article
Versió publicada
Anglès
Coalicions; Eleccions; Partits polítics; Coalitions; Elections; Political parties
Cambridge University Press
Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1086/693369
Journal of Politics, 2017, vol. 79, num. 4, p. 1454-1459
https://doi.org/10.1086/693369
(c) Southern Political Science Association, 2017