09:30 - 11:10
PS6
Room:
Room: South Room 223
Panel Session 6
Maiken Røed - Who polarizes? An analysis of identity conflict in Scandinavian parliaments
Garret Binding - Polarization in Multiple Dimensions
Theresa Gessler, Natasha Wunsch - A new regime divide? Affective polarization and attitudes towards democratic backsliding
Thiago M. Q. Moreira - Is it the economy? Economic voting in polarized politics
Christine Sylvester - Building Castles Made of Sand? The Impact of Domestic Issue Polarization on EP Party Unity
Building Castles Made of Sand? The Impact of Domestic Issue Polarization on EP Party Unity
PS6-5
Presented by: Christine Sylvester
Christine Sylvester 1, Zachary Greene 1, Nikoleta Yordanova 2, Anastasia Ershova 2, Aleksandra Khokhlova 2
1 University of Strathclyde
2 Leiden University
Does national level issue polarization predict the national party delegations unity in the European Parliament (EP)? Scholars find that disperse issue-level preferences within political parties can have a detrimental impact on a party’s electability. Fractionalization, within governing parties especially, results in mixed messages to voters over both the parties’ issue positions and their viability to hold office or oversee policy-making. However, these effects can have an even further reaching impact beyond the national political sphere. We propose that diverse preferences within political parties on a host of issue areas can springboard from domestic debates to the supranational level and playout cross-nationally in the EP. As we see more diversity of preferences and polarization of salient issue areas at the national level, we predict that these debates will be further amplified within the EP. In effect, voter and elite salience predicts the degree of polarization w