6533b836fe1ef96bd12a1c1f
RESEARCH PRODUCT
The Impact of Regional and National Leaders in Subnational Elections in Spain: Evidence from Andalusian Regional Elections
Fátima RecueroJosé Manuel TrujilloCarmen OrtegaPablo Oñatesubject
Public AdministrationSociology and Political SciencePolitical economyPolitical science0502 economics and business05 social sciences050602 political science & public administration050203 business & management0506 political sciencedescription
Abstract Democracies have experienced two trends in the last decades: the growing personalization of politics and the increasing relevance of regions in the political process. This article addresses these trends by posing two questions: Do political leaders influence the vote in regional elections? Do regional party leaders have a larger impact on voter preferences than their national counterparts in regional elections? To answer these questions, we analyzed five regional elections held in Andalusia between 2004 and 2018. The results show that both national and regional leaders matter in regional elections. However, the effect of national and regional leaders is “conditioned” by the characteristics of the leaders themselves, their respective parties, and citizens’ party attachments. Additionally, there is no clear evidence that the type of relationship between national and regional leaders of the same party—cohesion-like or confrontation-like—and the electoral context variables may affect the voting decision in multi-level government systems.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2021-02-27 | Publius: The Journal of Federalism |