Title of article :
Centre-Party Strength and Major-Party Divergence in Britain, 1945–2005
Author/Authors :
NAGEL، JACK H. نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages :
26
From page :
279
To page :
304
Abstract :
British elections exhibit two patterns contrary to expectations deriving from Duverger and Downs: centrist third parties (Liberals and their successors) win a large vote share; and the two major parties often espouse highly divergent policies. This article explores relations between the Liberal vote and left–right scores of the Labour and Conservative manifestos in the light of two hypotheses: the vacated centre posits that Liberals receive more votes when major parties diverge; the occupied centre proposes a lagged effect in which major parties diverge farther after Liberals do well in the preceding election. Data from elections since 1945 confirm the vacated-centre hypothesis, with Liberals benefiting about equally when the major parties diverge to the left and right, respectively. The results also support the occupied-centre hypothesis for Conservative party positions, but not for Labour’s. After considering explanations for this asymmetry, we identify historical events associated with turning points that our data reveal in post-war British politics.
Journal title :
British Journal of Political Science
Serial Year :
2010
Journal title :
British Journal of Political Science
Record number :
652492
Link To Document :
بازگشت