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Ideological congruence is the term generally used in comparative
politics for the representative relationship between the general
preferences of citizens and the perceived and stated position of
government. This study provides a systematic comparative assessment
of success and failure in achieving ideological congruence in
nineteen developed parliamentary democracies from 1996 through to
2017. It then deconstructs the processes through which elections
can connect citizens and governments into the three major stages:
citizens' votes in parliamentary elections; the conversion of those
votes into legislative representation; the election of prime
ministers by their parliaments and the appointment of cabinet
ministers. Analyzing these three stages shows that average distance
from the median citizen increases at each stage, with only a few
remarkable recoveries once congruence begins to go astray.
Ideological congruence is the term generally used in comparative
politics for the representative relationship between the general
preferences of citizens and the perceived and stated position of
government. This study provides a systematic comparative assessment
of success and failure in achieving ideological congruence in
nineteen developed parliamentary democracies from 1996 through to
2017. It then deconstructs the processes through which elections
can connect citizens and governments into the three major stages:
citizens' votes in parliamentary elections; the conversion of those
votes into legislative representation; the election of prime
ministers by their parliaments and the appointment of cabinet
ministers. Analyzing these three stages shows that average distance
from the median citizen increases at each stage, with only a few
remarkable recoveries once congruence begins to go astray.
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