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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Political interest furthers partisanship in England, Scotland, and Wales

Kai ArzheimerHarald Schoen

subject

021110 strategic defence & security studiesNational securitySociology and Political Sciencebusiness.industrymedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciences0211 other engineering and technologies02 engineering and technologyLatent class model0506 political scienceIdentification (information)PoliticsPerceptionLawPolitical economy050602 political science & public administrationSociologybusinessmedia_common

description

ABSTRACTAccording to much of the literature, partisanship in Britain exercises little independent influence on the vote but merely reflects voters’ prospective and retrospective evaluations of the parties’ performance with regard to their management of the economy, national security, and public services. In this view, partisanship comes close to Fiorina’s model of a “running tally” of political experiences. Similarly, Dalton’s notion of “cognitive mobilization” suggests that seeking out political information should undermine both the need for and the likelihood of party identification. Applying Mixed Markov Latent Class Analysis to the British Election Study Panel 1997–2000, we challenge these perceptions by demonstrating that partisanship is more stable than previously thought, and that high levels of political interest are linked to higher levels of partisanship and possible also to higher levels of stability. This is much more in line with classic ideas about party identification than with “revisionist...

https://doi.org/10.1080/17457289.2016.1179315