Replication data for: Government-Opposition or Left-Right? The Institutional Determinants of Voting in Legislatures

Hix, S. (2014). Replication data for: Government-Opposition or Left-Right? The Institutional Determinants of Voting in Legislatures. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/26530
Copy

Description

We use roll-call voting data from 16 legislatures to investigate how the institutional context of politics - such as whether a country is a parliamentary or presidential regime, or has a single-party, coalition or minority government - shapes coalition formation and voting behaviour in parliaments. We use a geometric scaling metric to estimate the "revealed space" in each of these legislatures and a vote-by-vote statistical analysis to identify how much of this space can be explained by government-opposition dynamics as opposed to (left-right) policy positions of parties. We find that government-opposition interests rather than parties' policy positions are the main drivers of voting behaviour in most institutional contexts. In contrast, we find that issue-by-issue coalition-building along a single policy dimension only exists under restrictive institutional constraints; namely presidential regimes with coalition governments or parliamentary systems with minority governments. Put another way, voting in most legislatives is more like Westminster than Washington, DC.

Available at: 10.7910/dvn/26530

Access level: Open

Licence: CC0 1.0


EndNote BibTeX Reference Manager (RIS) Refer Atom Dublin Core JSON Multiline CSV OPENAIRE
Export

Downloads