Social Origin Is No Destiny: Background, Institutionalization, and Electoral Performance of New Political Parties in Slovakia Cover Image
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Social Origin Is No Destiny: Background, Institutionalization, and Electoral Performance of New Political Parties in Slovakia
Social Origin Is No Destiny: Background, Institutionalization, and Electoral Performance of New Political Parties in Slovakia

Author(s): Marek Rybář, Peter Spáč
Subject(s): Civil Society, Electoral systems, Politics and society, Sociology of Politics
Published by: SAGE Publications Ltd
Keywords: political entrepreneur parties; socially rooted parties; party institutionalization; Slovakia; elections;

Summary/Abstract: The existing research suggests that socially rooted new political parties are more likely to be reelected to parliaments than parties emerging without links to preexisting social groups. It is argued that the two groups face different prospects of institutionalization: Rooted parties are more viable because their links to preexisting societal groups contribute to a higher sustainability of their electoral support and stronger institutionalization. We assess the link between the origin of parties, their level of institutionalization, and their electoral performance in the context of Slovakia, a new Eastern European democracy. We add to the existing state of knowledge in three ways. First, we empirically assess the link between the social origin of parties and their level of institutionalization. We also provide rich empirical material on the intraparty processes resulting in various levels of institutionalization. Subsequently, we assess whether rooted parties record better electoral performance than political entrepreneur parties. Second, we provide some illustration of the fact that agential factors, especially the decisions and activities related to leadership contestation, directly impact both party institutionalization and electoral performance. Third, we show that developing the links to a sociostructurally well-defined electorate may be a viable strategy to secure a parliamentary relevance for a prolonged period of time for some political entrepreneurs. Our findings suggest that parties with different levels of institutionalization are able to secure reelection, and that their electoral performance is not directly linked to their social origins.

  • Issue Year: 34/2020
  • Issue No: 03
  • Page Range: 637-662
  • Page Count: 26
  • Language: English