Camatarri, Stefano
[UCL]
Within the framework of the current democratic crisis, the electoral success of the so-called anti-establishment parties has been repeatedly and often associated with protest voting. Several scholars have tried to deal with this topic in the past, focusing particularly on the psychological dimension of the matter, i.e. on whether individual support for these actors was actually characterised by protest motivations. Yet, in so doing, they have almost completely overlooked the issue of how protest actually contributes to the electoral performance of apparent protest actors. The aim of this paper is precisely to fill this gap. Indeed, by looking at three Southern European countries (i.e. Greece, Italy and Spain), it aims to test the common-sense hypothesis that a higher strength of protest motivations in voters’ minds implies an increasing success of anti-establishment parties at the electoral level. Methodologically, this is accomplished by a series of counterfactual regression models on data from the 2014 European Election Voter Study (EES).
Bibliographic reference |
Camatarri, Stefano. What if it Kicked in More Strongly ? A Counterfactual Analysis of Protest Voting's Electoral Consequences in Greece, Italy and Spain. In: Representation, , p. 1-16 (2020) |
Permanent URL |
http://hdl.handle.net/2078.1/254969 |