J 2022

When Preferential Voting Really Matters : Explaining the Surprising Results of Parties in Electoral Coalitions

BALÍK, Stanislav and Jan HRUŠKA

Basic information

Original name

When Preferential Voting Really Matters : Explaining the Surprising Results of Parties in Electoral Coalitions

Authors

BALÍK, Stanislav and Jan HRUŠKA

Edition

Politologický časopis, Brno, Masarykova univerzita, Mezinárodní politologický ústav, 2022, 1211-3247

Other information

Language

English

Type of outcome

Article in a journal

Country of publisher

Czech Republic

Confidentiality degree

is not subject to a state or trade secret

References:

Marked to be transferred to RIV

Yes

RIV identification code

RIV/00216224:14230/22:00127193

Organization

Fakulta sociálních studií – Repository – Repository

EID Scopus

Keywords in English

preferential voting; electoral coalition; electoral alliance; candidate effect; effect of party characteristics; neighbourhood effect; party membership; Czech parliamentary election

Links

LX22NPO5101, research and development project. MUNI/A/1502/2021, interní kód Repo.
Changed: 13/6/2023 04:02, RNDr. Daniel Jakubík

Abstract

In the original language

Preferential voting in a proportional list system is an essential means by which voters can significantly influence which particular politician will represent them. However, preferential voting takes on a new dimension when several parties run on the same list as a coalition. In this case, the intra-party competition may become inter-party competition, where one or more parties may gain significantly from preferential voting at the expense of their partners. Despite this, research on this topic has been significantly neglected. Using the case of the 2021 Czech general election, where two newly formed electoral coalitions (SPOLU and PIRSTAN) run, we examine the nature of preferential voting in this different context of electoral coalitions. In the first part of the analysis, when we analyzed the characteristics of all candidates of both coalitions, we first confirmed that the candidate effect commonly observed in the case of conventional candidate lists also exists in this context. At the same time, we found that the candidate effect (through the adequate distribution of influential characteristics across parties in a coalition) can also affect the inter-party competition (as was the case of the PIRSTAN coalition). In the second part of the analysis, we found that in the context of electoral coalitions, party characteristics can also have a substantial effect on preferential voting (as was the case of the SPOLU coalition). Thus, both of these categories of effects can exist in the case of coalition lists, and both can affect inter-party competition. Nevertheless, future research is needed to confirm whether these findings are generally valid or whether the Czech case is somehow deviant. Existing research on this topic does not allow for a comparison.

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