Mitt Romney's gonna lower their taxes, so they're gonna vote for them, and to be clear, it's not that everyone's behavior The reference work is The Peoples Choice published in 1948 by Lazarsfeld, Berelson and Gaudet. HUr0c:*+ $ifrh
b98ih+I?v1q7q>. The concept of electoral choice does not belong to the sociological model but rather to rationalist theories. The term "group" can mean different things, which can be an ethnic group or a social class. [8][9], The second very important model is the psycho-sociological model, also known as the partisan identification model or Michigan School model, developed by Campbell, Converse, Miller and Stokes in Campbell, Converse, Miller and Stokes, among others in The American Voter published in 1960. On the basis of this, we can know. The psycho-sociological model is intended as a development that wants to respond to this criticism. In other words, they propose something quite ecumenical that combines directional and proximity models. This is also known as the Columbia model. WebVoting Behavior. In the literature, spatial theories of voting are often seen as one of the main developments of the last thirty years which has been precisely the development of directional models since the proximity model dates back to the 1950s. This is called prospective voting because voters will listen to what the parties have to say and evaluate on the basis of that, that is, looking ahead. Finally, in a phase of misalignment, this would be the economic model, since there is a loss of these partisan loyalties, so these voters become more and more reactive to political events and therefore may be more rational in their decision-making process. Partisan attachment is at the centre of the graph influencing opinions on certain issues being discussed or the attitudes of certain candidates. Between the early 1940s and the late 1960s, four basic models of voter behavior have been proposed on which almost all studies of electoral behavior draw. In other words, the voters' political preferences on different issues, in other words, in this type of theorizing, they know very well what they want, and what is more, these positions are very fixed and present when the voter is going to have to vote. Another strategy is the so-called "shortcut" that voters take within the rationalist framework of voting, since they are confronted with the problem of information and have to choose on the basis of this information. On the other hand, ideologically extreme voters try to influence party policies through party activism (voice). As for the intensity model, they manage to perceive something more, that is to say, not only a direction but an intensity through which a political party defends certain positions and goes in certain political directions. This approach has often been criticized as a static approach since socio-economic or even socio-demographic characteristics do not change in the short term and yet the vote increasingly changes in the short term, what is called in electoral volatility, i.e. As this is the first model that wanted to study empirically and test hypotheses on the basis of survey data, it was necessary to develop conceptual tools, in particular the political predisposition index, which focuses on three types of social affiliations that are fundamental in this perspective to explain electoral choices, namely social status, religion and place of residence. Harrop, Martin, and William L. Miller. Voting for a party and continuing to vote for such a party repeatedly makes it possible to develop an identification with that party which, in a way, then reinforces the electoral choice. Four questions can be asked in relation to this measure: For the first question, there are several studies on the fact that partisan identification is multi-dimensional and not just one-dimensional. It is an answer that remains faithful to the postulates of Downs' theory and the proximity model. With regard to the limits, methodological individualism has often been evoked, saying that it is an exclusively micro-sociological perspective that neglects the effect of social structure. It is a third explanation given by Przeworski and Sprague in their theory of partisan competition, also known as the theory of mobilization of the electorate. They try to elaborate a bit and find out empirically how this happens. The third criterion is rationality, which is that based on the theory of rational choice, voters mobilize the limited means at their disposal to achieve their goals, so they will choose the alternative among the political offer that costs them the least and brings them the greatest possible benefit. Voters have knowledge of the ideological positions of parties or candidates on one or more ideological dimensions and they use this knowledge to assess the political positions of these parties or candidates on specific issues. The economic model has put the rational and free citizen back at the centre of attention and reflection, whereas if we push the sociological model a bit to the extreme, it puts in second place this freedom and this free will that voters can make since the psycho-sociological model tells us that voting is determined by social position, it is not really an electoral choice that we make in the end but it is simply the result of our social insertion or our attachment to a party. In this model, there is a region of acceptability of positional extremism which is a region outside of which the intensity of the positions or the direction shown by a party cannot go because if it goes beyond that region, the voter will no longer choose that party. The system in the United States is bipartisan and the question asked was "Do you consider yourself a Republican, Democrat or otherwise? Webgain. The idea is that each voter can be represented by a point in a hypothetical space and this space can be a space with N dimensions and each dimension represents an election campaign issue, so that this point reflects his or her ideal set of policies, i.e. Sometimes, indeed often, people combine the first two models incorporating the psycho-sociological model on the basis that the Michigan model is just an extension of the Columbia model that helps explain some things that the Columbia model cannot explain. 0000009473 00000 n
It is a variant of the simple proximity model which remains in the idea of proximity but which adds an element which makes it possible to explain certain voting behaviours which would not be explainable by other models. Voting requires voters to know the candidates' positions on issues, but when there are several candidates or several parties, it is not very easy for some voters in particular. The sociological model obviously has a number of limitations like any voting model or any set of social science theories.
The role of the centrality of partisan identification has been criticized, especially today, because partisan identification plays a role that is still important but much less important than it used to be and may be much less important than some researchers within this paradigm have postulated. In other words, when we are interested in trying to explain the vote, we must already know what type of voter we are talking about. Here, preferences are endogenous and they can change. There are different strategies that are studied in the literature. xxxiii, 178. However, we see that this is not always true and that there are parties that propose more extreme policies that receive considerable electoral support. The sociological model at the theoretical level emphasizes something important that rationalist and economic theories have largely overlooked, namely, the importance of the role of social context, i.e., voters are all in social contexts and therefore not only family context but also a whole host of other social contexts. There are a whole host of typologies in relation to issues, and we distinguish different types of issues such as position issues and issues that are more or less emotional. There has also been the criticism of abstention as the result of rational calculation. In other words, there is the idea of utility maximization which is a key concept in rational choice theory, so the voter wants to maximize his utility and his utility is calculated according to the ratio between the cost and the benefit that can be obtained from the action, in this case going to vote (1) and going to vote for that party rather than this one (2). There are other models and economic theories of the vote, including directional theories that have a different perspective but remain within the framework of economic theories of the vote. 5. Inking and the role of socialization cause individuals to form a certain partisan identification that produces certain types of political attitudes. The presupposition for spatial theories of voting has already been mentioned, namely the stake vote. This is the basic motivation for the development of these directional models. We see the kinship of this model with the sociological model explaining that often they are put together. A distinction is often made between two types of voters and votes between the: There are these two types and a whole literature on the different types of euristics that can be set up. Iversena proposed a way of classifying the different explanatory theories of voting that allow to add a very important element that has been neglected until now. How does partisan identification develop? In directional models with intensity, there are models that try to show how the salience of different issues changes from one group to another, from one social group to another, or from one candidate and one party to another. If certain conditions are present, such as good democratic functioning within the party, activists will have the opportunity to exercise "voice" and influence positions. In other words, social, spatial or group membership largely determines individual political actions. If we look at it a little more broadly, partisan identification can be seen as a kind of shortcut. The aspect is based on the idea that there is an information problem that represents a difficulty and costs that voters must pay to gather information and to become informed about an election. Christopher Rice Follow Strategic Foresight Consultant, Facilitator, Public Speaker, Provocateur, Fox in a world of Hedgehogs - Less thunder in the mouth, more lightning in the hand Recommended Voting Behaviour Peped 4.6k views 22 slides Political Parties Chris Thomas 5.8k views 32 slides Introduction to Elections Peped 5.6k views 135150. We speak of cognitive preference between one's political preferences and the positions of the parties. The presupposition is that voter preferences are not exogenous but are endogenous - they change within the framework of an electoral process. THE DATA AND MEASUREMENTS Two data sets were used in the model con-struction and estimation, the 1964 and 1968 The first question is how to assess the position of the different parties and candidates, since we start from the idea of projecting voters' political preferences and party projections onto a map. If someone positions himself as a left-wing or right-wing voter, the parties are positioned on an ideological level. <]>>
All of these factors and their relationships have to be taken into account, but at the centre is always the partisan attachment. (1949). The original measurement was very simple being based on two questions which are a scale with a question about leadership. Prospective voting is based on election promises and retrospective voting is based on past performance. The importance of symbols lies in what arouses emotions. Webbehavior covers a large range of possible subjects of research, from the behaviors of bureaucrats and interest groups to the dealings of political terrorists. 0000006260 00000 n
He wanted to see the role of the media in particular and also the role of opinion leaders and therefore, the influences that certain people can have in the electoral choice. Voters try to maximize the usefulness of the vote, that is, they try to vote for the party that makes them more satisfied. Hinich and Munger take up the Downs idea but turn it around a bit. the maximum utility is reached at the line level. Reinforcement over time since adult voters increasingly rely on this partisan identification to vote and to face the problems of information, namely partisan identification seen as a way of solving a problem that all voters have, which is how to form an idea and deal with the abundance and complexity of the information that comes to us from, for example, the media, political campaigns or others in relation to the political offer. For Przeworski and Sprague, there may be another logic that is not one of maximizing the electorate in the short term but one of mobilizing the electorate in the medium and long term. It is a rather descriptive model, at least in its early stages. The second criticism is the lack of an adequate theory of preference formation. A second possible answer is that they will vote for the candidate who belongs to the party with which they identify. A person votes for Democratic candidates based on the belief that the policies of the Democratic Party will be personally beneficial. We are not ignoring the psychological model, which focuses on the identification people have with parties without looking at the parties. In other words, in this retrospective assessment, the economic situation of the country plays a crucial role. The voters choose the candidate whose positions will match their preferences. It is a moment when social cleavages directly influence the vote in this approach and therefore the sociological model, perhaps, at that moment, better explains the vote. The economic model makes predictions and tries to explain both the participation but also, and above all, the direction of the vote, which is the electoral choice. There are different strategies that are put in place by voters in a conscious or unconscious way to reduce these information costs, which are all the costs associated with the fact that in order to be able to evaluate the utility income given by one party rather than another, one has to go and see, listen, hear and understand what these parties are saying. There may be a vote that is different from partisan identification, but in the medium to long term, partisan identification should strengthen. There is an idea of interdependence between political supply and demand, between parties and voters, which is completely removed from other types of explanations. These authors find with panel data that among their confirmed hypotheses that extroverted people tend to have a strong and stable partisan identification. The idea is that there is something easier to evaluate which is the ideology of a party and that it is on the basis of this that the choice will be made. There are other theories that highlight the impact of economic conditions and how voters compare different election results in their electoral choices, which refers to economic voting in the strict sense of the term. Psychological theories are based on a type of explanation that does not focus on the issues discussed during a political campaign, for example. Ideology is to be understood as a way of simplifying our world in relation to the problem of information. The psycho-sociological model also developed a measure called the partisan identification index, since this model wanted to be an empirical model with behaviourism and the idea of studying individual behaviours empirically with the development of national election studies and survey data to try to measure the partisan identification index. It is a model that is very close to data and practice and lends itself very easily to empirical testing through measures of partisan identification and different measures of socio-demographic factors among others. Political conditions as well as the influence of the media play an important role, all the more so nowadays as more and more political campaigns and the role of the media overlap. We talk about the electoral market in the media or the electoral supply. There are a whole bunch of individual characteristics related to the fact that one is more of a systematic voter of something else. This is also known as the Columbia model. The idea of the directional model, and this applies to both the simple directional model and the intensity directional model, is that voters basically cannot clearly perceive the different positions of political parties or candidates on a specific issue. the further a party moves in the same direction as the voter, the more likely it is to be chosen by that voter. When the voter is in the same position, i.e. This is central to spatial theories of voting, that is, voters vote or will vote for the candidate or party that is closest to their own positions. These three models diverge in methodology and application of research, but each has provided important data regarding the factors that influence voter choice. This voting theory suggests that models of the vote choices of rational individuals should work with social rather than selsh utility functions. The second criterion is subjectivity, which is that voters calculate the costs and benefits of voting subjectively, so they make an assessment of the costs and benefits. For Fiorina, the retrospective vote is the fact that current policy is fundamental, whereas in the prospective vote it is less so. Thus our model explains not just why but also how rational people vote. 0000002253 00000 n
There are also external factors that also need to be considered, such as the actions of the government, for example, voters are influenced by what the government has done. The voters have to make that assessment and then decide which one brings more income and which one we will vote for. The idea is to see what are all the factors that explain the electoral choice. Hirschman wanted to explain what happens in organizations when they enter a situation of crisis or decline. From the parties' perspective, this model makes different predictions than the simple proximity model, which made a prediction of convergence of a centripetal force with respect to party positioning. Voters assess the utility income of parties and candidates. This is especially important when applying this type of reasoning empirically. Thus, voters will vote for candidates who are in the direction (1) and who are going in that direction in the most intense way (2), that is, who propose policies going in that direction in the strongest and most intense way. To summarize these approaches, there are four possible answers to the question of how voters decide to vote. Downs already put ideology at the centre of his explanation. This model shows that there is more than political identities, partisan identification and social inking. It is possible to determine direction based on the "neutral point" which is the point in the middle, or it is also possible to determine direction from the "status quo". Value orientations refer to materialism as well as post-materialism, among other things, cleavages but no longer from a value perspective. The law of curvilinear disparity takes up this distinction. 0000000636 00000 n
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