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Pre‐Election Positions and Voting Behaviour in Parliament: Consistency among Swiss MPs
Author(s) -
Schwarz Daniel,
Schädel Lisa,
Ladner Andreas
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
swiss political science review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.632
H-Index - 30
eISSN - 1662-6370
pISSN - 1424-7755
DOI - 10.1002/j.1662-6370.2010.tb00440.x
Subject(s) - parliament , voting , legislature , political science , consistency (knowledge bases) , politics , straight ticket voting , position (finance) , ordered logit , single member district , split ticket voting , political economy , public administration , law , economics , statistics , mathematics , finance , geometry
This article examines the determinants of positional incongruence between pre‐election statements and post‐election behaviour in the Swiss parliament between 2003 and 2009. The question is examined at the individual MP level, which is appropriate for dispersion‐of‐powers systems like Switzerland. While the overall rate of political congruence reaches about 85%, a multilevel logit analysis detects the underlying factors which push or curb a candidate's propensity to change his or her mind once elected. The results show that positional changes are more likely when (1) MPs are freshmen, (2) individual voting behaviour is invisible to the public, (3) the electoral district magnitude is not small, (4) the vote is not about a party's core issue, (5) the MP belongs to a party which is located in the political centre, and (6) if the pre‐election statement dissents from the majority position of the legislative party group. Of these factors, the last one is paramount.