Second-Order Effects Plus Pan-European Political Swings: An Analysis of European Parliament Elections Across Time
Citation:
Simon Hix and Michael Marsh, Second-Order Effects Plus Pan-European Political Swings: An Analysis of European Parliament Elections Across Time, Electoral Studies, 30, 1, 2011, 4-15Download Item:
Abstract:
After seven waves of European Parliament elections and European Union enlargement to 27 states, the time is ripe to analyse the temporal robustness of the second-order model. We pool all the elections in a single evaluation and also look at election-by-election variations. We analyse changes in party performance over time in all EU states as well as in the `original 10?, to see whether any cross-time changes are driven by the changing composition of the EU. We also look for pan-European trends in each election, as a way identifying `European effects? distinct from second-order effects. There are few consistent winners and losers, although socialist parties performed worse in the last three elections than their size and government status would predict.
Author's Homepage:
http://people.tcd.ie/mmarshDescription:
PUBLISHED
Author: MARSH, MICHAEL ANTHONY
Publisher:
ElsevierType of material:
Journal ArticleCollections
Series/Report no:
Electoral Studies;30;
1;
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Full text availableSubject:
Political Science, European electionsMetadata
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