Still blurry? Economic salience, position and voting for radical right parties in Western Europe

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Still blurry? Economic salience, position and voting for radical right parties in Western Europe. / Rovny, Jan; Polk, Jonathan.

I: European Journal of Political Research, Bind 59, Nr. 2, 01.05.2020, s. 248-268.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Rovny, J & Polk, J 2020, 'Still blurry? Economic salience, position and voting for radical right parties in Western Europe', European Journal of Political Research, bind 59, nr. 2, s. 248-268. https://doi.org/10.1111/1475-6765.12356

APA

Rovny, J., & Polk, J. (2020). Still blurry? Economic salience, position and voting for radical right parties in Western Europe. European Journal of Political Research, 59(2), 248-268. https://doi.org/10.1111/1475-6765.12356

Vancouver

Rovny J, Polk J. Still blurry? Economic salience, position and voting for radical right parties in Western Europe. European Journal of Political Research. 2020 maj 1;59(2):248-268. https://doi.org/10.1111/1475-6765.12356

Author

Rovny, Jan ; Polk, Jonathan. / Still blurry? Economic salience, position and voting for radical right parties in Western Europe. I: European Journal of Political Research. 2020 ; Bind 59, Nr. 2. s. 248-268.

Bibtex

@article{f56b7272452a4f05857af7168f9e2004,
title = "Still blurry?: Economic salience, position and voting for radical right parties in Western Europe",
abstract = "Do radical right parties present blurry economic stances, or have they clarified their positions while moving towards the economic left? This article questions the strategic behaviour of radical right parties in Western Europe. It shows that although radical right parties have increased their discussion of economic issues, and expert placements of this party family on the economic dimension have become more centrist over time, the uncertainty surrounding these placements continues to be higher for the radical right than any other party family in Europe. The article then moves on to examine to what extent voter‐party congruence on redistribution, immigration and other issues of social lifestyle predict an individual's propensity to vote for the radical right compared to other parties. Although redistribution is the component of economic policy where the radical right seems to be centrist, the findings indicate that it remains party‐voter congruence on immigration that drives support for radical right parties, while the congruence level for redistribution has an insignificant effect. The article concludes that while radical right parties seem to have included some clearly left‐leaning economic proposals, which shifted the general expert views of these parties to the economic centre, their overall economic profiles remain as blurry as ever.",
keywords = "political parties, radical right, blurring",
author = "Jan Rovny and Jonathan Polk",
year = "2020",
month = may,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1111/1475-6765.12356",
language = "English",
volume = "59",
pages = "248--268",
journal = "European Journal of Political Research",
issn = "0304-4130",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Still blurry?

T2 - Economic salience, position and voting for radical right parties in Western Europe

AU - Rovny, Jan

AU - Polk, Jonathan

PY - 2020/5/1

Y1 - 2020/5/1

N2 - Do radical right parties present blurry economic stances, or have they clarified their positions while moving towards the economic left? This article questions the strategic behaviour of radical right parties in Western Europe. It shows that although radical right parties have increased their discussion of economic issues, and expert placements of this party family on the economic dimension have become more centrist over time, the uncertainty surrounding these placements continues to be higher for the radical right than any other party family in Europe. The article then moves on to examine to what extent voter‐party congruence on redistribution, immigration and other issues of social lifestyle predict an individual's propensity to vote for the radical right compared to other parties. Although redistribution is the component of economic policy where the radical right seems to be centrist, the findings indicate that it remains party‐voter congruence on immigration that drives support for radical right parties, while the congruence level for redistribution has an insignificant effect. The article concludes that while radical right parties seem to have included some clearly left‐leaning economic proposals, which shifted the general expert views of these parties to the economic centre, their overall economic profiles remain as blurry as ever.

AB - Do radical right parties present blurry economic stances, or have they clarified their positions while moving towards the economic left? This article questions the strategic behaviour of radical right parties in Western Europe. It shows that although radical right parties have increased their discussion of economic issues, and expert placements of this party family on the economic dimension have become more centrist over time, the uncertainty surrounding these placements continues to be higher for the radical right than any other party family in Europe. The article then moves on to examine to what extent voter‐party congruence on redistribution, immigration and other issues of social lifestyle predict an individual's propensity to vote for the radical right compared to other parties. Although redistribution is the component of economic policy where the radical right seems to be centrist, the findings indicate that it remains party‐voter congruence on immigration that drives support for radical right parties, while the congruence level for redistribution has an insignificant effect. The article concludes that while radical right parties seem to have included some clearly left‐leaning economic proposals, which shifted the general expert views of these parties to the economic centre, their overall economic profiles remain as blurry as ever.

KW - political parties

KW - radical right

KW - blurring

U2 - 10.1111/1475-6765.12356

DO - 10.1111/1475-6765.12356

M3 - Journal article

VL - 59

SP - 248

EP - 268

JO - European Journal of Political Research

JF - European Journal of Political Research

SN - 0304-4130

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 235409370