The 2014 European elections were characterized in many countries by growing support for Eurosceptic parties. This growth was not uniform and not clearly associated with the economic performance of these member states. In this article, we investigate the role played in the 2014 European Parliament elections by a country-specific factor – the composition of government coalitions – different from economic performance. In particular, we argue that in those countries where moderately Eurosceptic parties were more involved in the government, citizens with negative attitudes toward the European Union were more likely to vote for highly Eurosceptic parties. This was especially the case when the governments also included strongly pro-EU parties. The empirical analysis, which is based upon the 2014 European Election Voter Study, the Chapel Hill Expert Survey, and the Parliaments and Governments database, confirms our hypotheses.

Government coalitions and Eurosceptic voting in the 2014 European Parliament elections / S. Camatarri, F. Zucchini. - In: EUROPEAN UNION POLITICS. - ISSN 1465-1165. - 20:3(2019), pp. 425-446. ((Intervento presentato al convegno ECPR annual general conference tenutosi a Montreal nel 2015 [10.1177/1465116519851566].

Government coalitions and Eurosceptic voting in the 2014 European Parliament elections

F. Zucchini
2019

Abstract

The 2014 European elections were characterized in many countries by growing support for Eurosceptic parties. This growth was not uniform and not clearly associated with the economic performance of these member states. In this article, we investigate the role played in the 2014 European Parliament elections by a country-specific factor – the composition of government coalitions – different from economic performance. In particular, we argue that in those countries where moderately Eurosceptic parties were more involved in the government, citizens with negative attitudes toward the European Union were more likely to vote for highly Eurosceptic parties. This was especially the case when the governments also included strongly pro-EU parties. The empirical analysis, which is based upon the 2014 European Election Voter Study, the Chapel Hill Expert Survey, and the Parliaments and Governments database, confirms our hypotheses.
European Parliament elections; Eurosceptic parties; government coalitions; veto players; voting behavior
Settore SPS/04 - Scienza Politica
2019
ECPR (European Consortium of Political Research)
Article (author)
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/664776
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