Centrist Anti-Establishment Parties and Their Struggle for Survival

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Authors

Centrist Anti-Establishment Parties and Their Struggle for Survival explores the electoral fate of new parties that promise little more than to be better than the “dishonest” political establishment. Initially extremely successful, many centrist anti-establishment parties (CAPs) do not survive more than a few consecutive elections. Nevertheless, some CAPs do endure. How do parties survive when newness is their only selling point? As the first book-length study on this type of party, the volume explores this question in Central and Eastern Europe, where CAPs have dominated politics for more than two decades. The book’s main argument focuses on CAPs’ electoral strategies after their first elections. It derives three strategies of survival that lead to more sustainable electoral support: a reframed protest strategy, an anti-corruption strategy, and a mainstream strategy. Combining quantitative data from an original expert survey with qualitative evidence from elite interviews, the book demonstrates that CAPs only survive when they abandon their initial strategy of pure protest. While strategic change is necessary for party survival, several failed attempts at transformation show that it is not sufficient. Whether a party successfully adopts a new strategy depends on how coherent its voters’ preferences are. Analyses of CAPs’ voter bases show that the more a CAP first attracted voters from both the left and the right, the more it struggles. Ideology, seemingly irrelevant to CAPs’ initial successes, eventually determines CAPs’ fates. These findings have implications for other European countries, where CAP-like parties, such as the Italian Five Star Movement, follow similar trajectories.

Original languageEnglish
Place of PublicationOxford
PublisherOxford University Press
Number of pages208
ISBN (print)9780192873132, 019287313X
ISBN (electronic)9780191975998
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 19.10.2023

Publication series

NameComparative Politics

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© Sarah Engler 2023.

    Research areas

  • Politics - Anti-Establishment Rhetoric, Central and Eastern Europe, Centrist Anti-Establishment Parties, Corruption, Ideology, New Parties, Party Strategies, Party Survival, Populism, Protest Voting