When economic and cultural interests align: the anti-immigration voter coalitions driving far right party success in Europe

This article contests the view that the strong positive correlation between anti-immigration attitudes and far right party success necessarily constitutes evidence in support of the cultural grievance thesis. We argue that the success of far right parties depends on their ability to mobilize a coali...

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Main Authors: Halikiopoulou, D, Vlandas, T
格式: Journal article
語言:English
出版: Cambridge University Press 2020
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author Halikiopoulou, D
Vlandas, T
author_facet Halikiopoulou, D
Vlandas, T
author_sort Halikiopoulou, D
collection OXFORD
description This article contests the view that the strong positive correlation between anti-immigration attitudes and far right party success necessarily constitutes evidence in support of the cultural grievance thesis. We argue that the success of far right parties depends on their ability to mobilize a coalition of interests between their core supporters, that is voters with cultural grievances over immigration and the often larger group of voters with economic grievances over immigration. Using individual level data from eight rounds of the European Social Survey, our empirical analysis shows that while cultural concerns over immigration are a stronger predictor of far right party support, those who are concerned with the impact of immigration on the economy are important to the far right in numerical terms. Taken together, our findings suggest that economic grievances over immigration remain pivotal within the context of the transnational cleavage.
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spelling oxford-uuid:a02d90ba-a161-41fb-994e-a2eee539c7562022-03-27T02:03:36ZWhen economic and cultural interests align: the anti-immigration voter coalitions driving far right party success in EuropeJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:a02d90ba-a161-41fb-994e-a2eee539c756EnglishSymplectic ElementsCambridge University Press2020Halikiopoulou, DVlandas, TThis article contests the view that the strong positive correlation between anti-immigration attitudes and far right party success necessarily constitutes evidence in support of the cultural grievance thesis. We argue that the success of far right parties depends on their ability to mobilize a coalition of interests between their core supporters, that is voters with cultural grievances over immigration and the often larger group of voters with economic grievances over immigration. Using individual level data from eight rounds of the European Social Survey, our empirical analysis shows that while cultural concerns over immigration are a stronger predictor of far right party support, those who are concerned with the impact of immigration on the economy are important to the far right in numerical terms. Taken together, our findings suggest that economic grievances over immigration remain pivotal within the context of the transnational cleavage.
spellingShingle Halikiopoulou, D
Vlandas, T
When economic and cultural interests align: the anti-immigration voter coalitions driving far right party success in Europe
title When economic and cultural interests align: the anti-immigration voter coalitions driving far right party success in Europe
title_full When economic and cultural interests align: the anti-immigration voter coalitions driving far right party success in Europe
title_fullStr When economic and cultural interests align: the anti-immigration voter coalitions driving far right party success in Europe
title_full_unstemmed When economic and cultural interests align: the anti-immigration voter coalitions driving far right party success in Europe
title_short When economic and cultural interests align: the anti-immigration voter coalitions driving far right party success in Europe
title_sort when economic and cultural interests align the anti immigration voter coalitions driving far right party success in europe
work_keys_str_mv AT halikiopouloud wheneconomicandculturalinterestsaligntheantiimmigrationvotercoalitionsdrivingfarrightpartysuccessineurope
AT vlandast wheneconomicandculturalinterestsaligntheantiimmigrationvotercoalitionsdrivingfarrightpartysuccessineurope