
Assessing the impact of party identification in transnational election campaigns: Evidence from the 2019 European Parliament election
Author(s) -
Thomas Waldvogel,
Uwe Wagschal,
Thomas Metz,
Bernd W. Becker,
Linus Feiten,
Samuel Weishaupt
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of contemporary european research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.299
H-Index - 15
ISSN - 1815-347X
DOI - 10.30950/jcer.v17i3.1129
Subject(s) - parliament , political science , presidency , primary election , identification (biology) , heuristics , politics , ideology , european commission , public administration , general election , political economy , public relations , law , sociology , european union , international trade , economics , computer science , botany , biology , operating system
Since the introduction of “Spitzenkandidaten” for the presidency of the European Commission, elections to the European Parliament have been characterised by the dynamic between an increasingly transnational election campaign and a national electoral process. However, the implementation of a European election campaign focusing on transnational top candidates remains controversial because it is still unclear to what extent nationally formed political predispositions such as party identification can serve as heuristics for assessing a transnational election campaign. Though TV duels as miniature campaigns directly open up this antagonism, research at the European level remains limited. Drawing on data from a field study consisting of virtualised real-time-response measurement and survey data of 157 participants, we show that expressive party identification as a heuristic is considerably constrained in transnational debates’ reception, while being complemented by instrumental aspects such as candidate orientations and ideological attitudes.