Event

Attributing Policy Influence under Coalition Governance

Date
24 Jan 2020
Time
12:15 UK time
Speakers
David Fortunato
Where
Manor Road Building, Seminar Room A, Manor Road OX1 3UQ
Series
Politics Research Colloquium
Audience
Members of the University only
Booking
Not required
Sandwiches will be provided.
Coalition governance divides policymaking influence across multiple parties, making it challenging for voters to accurately attribute responsibility for outcomes. We argue that many voters overcome this challenge by inferring parties’ policymaking influence using a simple heuristic model that integrates a number of readily available and cheaply obtained informational cues about parties (e.g., their roles in government and legislative seat shares) — while ignoring other cues that, while predictive of real-world influence, are not suitable for heuristic inference (e.g., median party status and voting power). Using original data from seven surveys in five countries, we show that voters’ attributions of parties’ policymaking influence are consistent with our proposed inferential strategy. Our findings suggest that while voters certainly have blind spots that cause them to misattribute policy responsibility in some situations, on the whole their attributions of policymaking influence are quite sensible.