Territory and electoral politics in Germany

Research output: Contributions to collected editions/worksChapterpeer-review

Authors

Modern party political competition, as this volume illustrates, occurs in ever more complex settings. Long gone are the days (if, indeed, they ever existed at all) when parties could craft one political package that was suitable for more or less all electoral contests. Parties now have to mould, shape and articulate their demands in a multitude of ways to make them relevant to different sets of voters possessing differentiated sets of interests for elections to different sets of institutions. At the vertical level, federal institutional arrangements have traditionally been used to permit voters to voice their territorially specific interests in substate elections. Long-established federal states (such as the US, Australia, Canada, Germany and Switzerland) have recently been joined by states such as Belgium, the UK, Spain and Italy — to name but four — in creating, or rejuvenating, genuinely significant multilayered institutional frameworks. Increasing divergences in wealth, interests and even identity awareness within nation-states have also prompted parties to mould their political profiles and messages in more subtle and focused ways in order to appeal to electors who rely less and less frequently on the pillars of class and partisan alignments in shaping their votes.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationTerritorial Party Politics in Western Europe
EditorsWilfried Swenden, Bart Maddens
Number of pages16
Place of PublicationLondon
PublisherPalgrave Macmillan
Publication date27.11.2008
Pages47-62
ISBN (Print)978-023052162-9, 978-1-349-35651-5
ISBN (Electronic)978-0-230-58294-1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 27.11.2008
Externally publishedYes

    Research areas

  • Politics - Vote Behaviour, Electoral Outcome, Vote Share, Party system, Western State

DOI