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Who Votes for New Parties? Economic Voting, Political Ideology and Populist Attitudes
Journal
West European Politics
Type
journal article
Date Issued
2020
Author(s)
Abstract (De)
Beginning with the economic crisis in 2008, a number of European societies witnessed the emergence of ‘new parties’. Most authors explain their electoral appeal by focusing on how the perceived state of the economy influences individuals’ voting decisions. This article determines the extent to which political attitudes can also explain voting for new political parties born in the heat of the economic crisis. Specifically, it explores the link between populist attitudes, in contrast to pluralist and elitist attitudes, and voting for two new political parties in Spain (Ciudadanos; Podemos), which are noticeably different in their ideological positions, programmatic proposals and populist discourses. The results show that stronger populist attitudes increase the likelihood of voting for new parties as dissimilar as Podemos and Ciudadanos. Overall, the findings suggest that voting for new parties cannot be understood as a mere economic response. Rather, political factors, and especially populist attitudes, matter too.
Language
English
HSG Classification
contribution to scientific community
HSG Profile Area
SEPS - Economic Policy
Refereed
Yes
Volume
43
Number
1
Start page
1
End page
21
Pages
21
Subject(s)
Eprints ID
257131
File(s)
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open access
Name
Who votes for new parties Economic voting political ideology and populist attitudes.pdf
Size
1.97 MB
Format
Adobe PDF
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