|
|
WORKING PAPER
Issues, Economics and the Dynamics of Multi-Party Elections: The British 1987 General Election
Alvarez, R. Michael
Bowler, Shaun
Nagler, Jonathan
Abstract
This paper offers a model of three-party elections which allows voters
to combine retrospective economic evaluations with considerations of
the positions of the parties in the issue-space as well as the
issue-preferences of the voters. We describe a model of British
elections which allows voters to consider simultaneously all three
parties, rather than limiting voters to choices among pairs of parties
as is usually done. Using this model we show that both policy issues
and the state of the national economy matter in British elections. We
also show how voters framed their decisions. Voters first made a
retrospective evaluation of the Conservative party based on economic
performance; and those voters that rejected the Conservative party
chose between Labour and Alliance based on issue positions. Through
simulations of the effects of issues -- we move the parties in the
issue space and re-estimate vote-shares -- and the economy -- we
hypothesize an alternative distribution of views of the economy for
voters -- we show that Labour has virtually no chance to win with the
Alliance as a viable alternative. Even if the Alliance (or the Liberal
Democrats) disappears, Labour will need to significantly moderate its
policy positions to have a chance of competing with the Conservative
party. We argue that the methodological technique we employ,
multinomial probit, is a superior mechanism for studying three-party
elections as it allows for a richer formulation of politics than do
competing methods.
Keywords
British Elections Economic Voting Elections Issue Voting Multicandidate Elections Multinomial Probit Spatial Model
File
Uploaded
00-00-0000
Document ID Number
339
|
|