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ArtikelPartisanship, Performance and Personality; Competing and Complementary Characterizations of the 2001 British General Election  
Oleh: Bartle, John
Jenis: Article from Journal - ilmiah internasional
Dalam koleksi: Party Politics vol. 9 no. 3 (May 2003), page 317–345.
Topik: causal modelling  evaluations of party leaders  party identification  prospective voting  retrospective voting
Fulltext: 317PP93.pdf (156.19KB)
Isi artikelThe study of voting behaviour is characterized by controversy about the ‘importance’ of various explanatory themes and specific variables, but there is a widespread reluctance to assess these hypotheses in a comprehensive causal model. This article specifies a model of Labour and Conservative voting in the 2001 British General Election which incorporates a whole series of competing and complementary hypotheses. The results suggest that partisanship, prospective evaluations of competence and favourable evaluations of Tony Blair all contributed to Labour’s victory, while retrospective evaluations of Labour’s record on crime and asylum-seekers reduced the size of Labour’s victory. Analyses that incorporate a new measure of party identification suggest that longterm partisanship may have contributed less and short-term factors correspondingly more to the aggregate election outcome.
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