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Holding parties responsible at election time: Multi-level,multi-party government and electoral accountability
Affiliation:1. Division of Lower GI Surgery, Department of Surgery, Hyogo College of Medicine, Hyogo, Japan;2. Department of Colorectal Surgery, Kitasato University School of Medicine, Kanagawa, Japan;3. Department of Radiology, National Hospital Organization Disaster Medical Center, Tokyo, Japan;4. Department of Radiology, Hyogo College of Medicine, Hyogo, Japan;5. Department of Gastrointestinal Surgery, Toranomon Hospital, Tokyo, Japan;6. Department of Radiology, Toranomon Hospital, Tokyo, Japan;7. Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Graduate School of Medical Life Sciences, Kumamoto University, Kumamoto, Japan;8. Department of Radiation Oncology, Graduate School of Life Sciences, Kumamoto University, Kumamoto, Japan;9. Department of Surgery, Keio University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan;10. Department of Radiology, Keio University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan;11. Japanese Red Cross Wakayama Medical Center, Wakayama, Japan;12. Department of Surgery, Tokushima University Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, Tokushima, Japan;13. Department of Surgery, Graduate School of Medicine and Faculty of Medicine Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan;14. Department of Surgery, Yoshinogawa Medical Center, Tokushima, Japan;15. Department of Pathology, Kitasato University School of Medicine, Kanagawa, Japan;p. Department of Clinical Medicine (Biostatistics), Kitasato University School of Pharmacy, Tokyo, Japan;q. Radiation Oncology Department, The Cancer Institute Hospital Japanese Foundation for Cancer Research, Tokyo, Japan;r. Department of Surgery, Saitama Medical Center, Dokkyo Medical University, Saitama, Japan;s. Kitasato Institute Hospital, Kitasato University, Kanagawa, Japan
Abstract:This paper highlights the crucial role played by party-specific responsibility attributions in performance-based voting. Three models of electoral accountability, which make distinct assumptions regarding citizens' ability to attribute responsibility to distinct governing parties, are tested in the challenging Northern Ireland context – an exemplar case of multi-level multi-party government in which expectations of performance based voting are low. The paper demonstrates the operation of party-attribution based electoral accountability, using data from the 2011 Northern Ireland Assembly Election Study. However, the findings are asymmetric: accountability operates in the Protestant/unionist bloc but not in the Catholic/nationalist bloc. This asymmetry may be explained by the absence of clear ethno-national ideological distinctions between the unionist parties (hence providing political space for performance based accountability to operate) but the continued relevance in the nationalist bloc of ethno-national difference (which limits the scope for performance politics). The implications of the findings for our understanding of the role of party-specific responsibility attribution in performance based models of voting, and for our evaluation of the quality of democracy in post-conflict consociational polities, are discussed.
Keywords:Attribution of responsibility to parties  Electoral accountability  Coalition government  Multi-level government  Consociational power sharing  Northern Ireland
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