Party Groups in the European Parliament, Cohesiveness and MEPs' Survey Data: New Evidence on Voting Behaviour from a New (Simple) Methodology?

<span class='abs_content'>The increased centrality of the European Parliament within the EU's institutional structure has influenced the importance of voting behaviour within the Parliament. The concept of voting behaviour can be split into a variety of elements, one of which is...

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Main Author: Lorenzo Chicchi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Università del Salento 2011-11-01
Series:Interdisciplinary Political Studies
Online Access:http://siba-ese.unisalento.it/index.php/idps/article/view/17266
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spelling doaj-74daaf08e1dd49d8818308913c397ee22020-11-25T03:04:00ZengUniversità del SalentoInterdisciplinary Political Studies2039-85732011-11-011213714710.1285/i20398573v1n2p13715994Party Groups in the European Parliament, Cohesiveness and MEPs' Survey Data: New Evidence on Voting Behaviour from a New (Simple) Methodology?Lorenzo Chicchi<span class='abs_content'>The increased centrality of the European Parliament within the EU's institutional structure has influenced the importance of voting behaviour within the Parliament. The concept of voting behaviour can be split into a variety of elements, one of which is parliamentary group cohesiveness. A consolidated stream of literature has treated the Euro-party groups as highly cohesive actors, influenced mainly by the classical left-right cleavage, with nationality playing a marginal role. However, other scholars suggest that the methods used to reach these findings are biased. Using an original and simple methodology, which transforms data from surveys to virtual votes, I build a simple model to test voting cohesiveness if the national element is a weak predictor of "vote"; even though this vote is dependent upon exogenous preferences and not mediated by party discipline. My results show that the oft-repeated claims about the single-dimensionality of the European Parliament should be taken more carefully: national affiliation seems to play a greater role than the one usually envisaged by the mainstream literature.</span><br/>http://siba-ese.unisalento.it/index.php/idps/article/view/17266
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lorenzo Chicchi
spellingShingle Lorenzo Chicchi
Party Groups in the European Parliament, Cohesiveness and MEPs' Survey Data: New Evidence on Voting Behaviour from a New (Simple) Methodology?
Interdisciplinary Political Studies
author_facet Lorenzo Chicchi
author_sort Lorenzo Chicchi
title Party Groups in the European Parliament, Cohesiveness and MEPs' Survey Data: New Evidence on Voting Behaviour from a New (Simple) Methodology?
title_short Party Groups in the European Parliament, Cohesiveness and MEPs' Survey Data: New Evidence on Voting Behaviour from a New (Simple) Methodology?
title_full Party Groups in the European Parliament, Cohesiveness and MEPs' Survey Data: New Evidence on Voting Behaviour from a New (Simple) Methodology?
title_fullStr Party Groups in the European Parliament, Cohesiveness and MEPs' Survey Data: New Evidence on Voting Behaviour from a New (Simple) Methodology?
title_full_unstemmed Party Groups in the European Parliament, Cohesiveness and MEPs' Survey Data: New Evidence on Voting Behaviour from a New (Simple) Methodology?
title_sort party groups in the european parliament, cohesiveness and meps' survey data: new evidence on voting behaviour from a new (simple) methodology?
publisher Università del Salento
series Interdisciplinary Political Studies
issn 2039-8573
publishDate 2011-11-01
description <span class='abs_content'>The increased centrality of the European Parliament within the EU's institutional structure has influenced the importance of voting behaviour within the Parliament. The concept of voting behaviour can be split into a variety of elements, one of which is parliamentary group cohesiveness. A consolidated stream of literature has treated the Euro-party groups as highly cohesive actors, influenced mainly by the classical left-right cleavage, with nationality playing a marginal role. However, other scholars suggest that the methods used to reach these findings are biased. Using an original and simple methodology, which transforms data from surveys to virtual votes, I build a simple model to test voting cohesiveness if the national element is a weak predictor of "vote"; even though this vote is dependent upon exogenous preferences and not mediated by party discipline. My results show that the oft-repeated claims about the single-dimensionality of the European Parliament should be taken more carefully: national affiliation seems to play a greater role than the one usually envisaged by the mainstream literature.</span><br/>
url http://siba-ese.unisalento.it/index.php/idps/article/view/17266
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