Publication | Closed Access
Political Parties and Political Representation
416
Citations
20
References
1985
Year
Party Linkage ProcessPublic PolicyPolitical EquilibriumPolitical ProcessComparative PoliticsPolitical BehaviorPolitical OrganizationsPolitical SystemPolitical PartiesParty SystemsEuropean PoliticsPolitical CompetitionPolitical ScienceSocial Sciences
Political representation in most Western democracies occurs through and by political parties. The study examines how well parties perform their representation role using parallel surveys of voters and party elites in nine Western European nations. The authors compared voter and elite opinions for 40 party dyads across nine countries and analyzed how party characteristics such as centralized structure and noncentrist ideology affect the linkage process. They found close voter‑elite agreement on economic and security issues but weaker alignment on foreign policy, and that clearer party positions—centralized structure and noncentrist ideology—enhance linkage efficiency.
Political representation in most Western democracies occurs through and by political parties. Based on parallel surveys of voters and party elites in nine West European nations, this article examines how well parties perform their representation role. The opinions of voters and party elites are compared for 40 party dyads. In some cases there is close correspondence between these opinions (e.g., economic and security issues), but in other instances the evidence of voter-party agreement is substantially weaker (e.g., foreign policy). An examination of party characteristics and contextual factors suggests that the clarity of party positions, represented by a centralized party structure and noncentrist ideology, strongly influences the efficiency of the party linkage process.
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