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The tie that divides: Cross‐national evidence of the primacy of partyism
Authors:SEAN J. WESTWOOD  SHANTO IYENGAR  STEFAAN WALGRAVE  RAFAEL LEONISIO  LUIS MILLER  OLIVER STRIJBIS
Affiliation:1. Department of Government, Dartmouth College, USA;2. Department of Political Science, Stanford University, USA;3. Department of Political Science, University of Antwerp, Belgium;4. Department of Political Science, University of the Basque Country and University of Deusto, Spain;5. School of Economics and Business, University of the Basque Country, Spain;6. Berlin Social Science Center (WZB), Germany
Abstract:Using evidence from Great Britain, the United States, Belgium and Spain, it is demonstrated in this article that in integrated and divided nations alike, citizens are more strongly attached to political parties than to the social groups that the parties represent. In all four nations, partisans discriminate against their opponents to a degree that exceeds discrimination against members of religious, linguistic, ethnic or regional out‐groups. This pattern holds even when social cleavages are intense and the basis for prolonged political conflict. Partisan animus is conditioned by ideological proximity; partisans are more distrusting of parties furthest from them in the ideological space. The effects of partisanship on trust are eroded when partisan and social ties collide. In closing, the article considers the reasons that give rise to the strength of ‘partyism’ in modern democracies.
Keywords:polarisation  affect  partisanship
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