Party Systems and Government Stability
- 1 March 1971
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in American Political Science Review
- Vol. 65 (1) , 28-37
- https://doi.org/10.2307/1955041
Abstract
Arguments are presented for and against a series of hypotheses about the influence of the parliamentary party system on the stability of governments, and the hypotheses are tested against data on 196 governments in parliamentary democracies since 1945. A strong relation is found between the duration of governments and the fragmentation of the parliamentary party system and of the government parties, but the fragmentation of the opposition parties seems not to affect stability. One-party governments are more stable than coalition governments, and majority governments more than minority governments. The ideological dispersion of the parties—in the whole parliament, in the government, or in the opposition—does not explain stability any better than fragmentation, which is based upon only the number and sizes of parties; but the proportion of seats held by ‘anti-system’ parties (communists and neo-fascists, mainly) is a good indicator of stability. The best explanation of government stability found here is the combined linear influence of the size of the anti-system parties and the fragmentation of the pro-system parties.Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Mass Politics: Studies in Political Sociology.Contemporary Sociology: A Journal of Reviews, 1972
- The Politics of AccommodationPublished by University of California Press ,1968
- Party Systems and Patterns of Government in Western DemocraciesCanadian Journal Of Political Science-Revue Canadienne De Science Politique, 1968
- Typologies of Democratic SystemsComparative Political Studies, 1968
- A Measure of Ordinal ConsensusThe Pacific Sociological Review, 1966
- Majorities and Minorities in Western European GovernmentsThe Western Political Quarterly, 1959
- Stable Instability in FranceForeign Affairs, 1956
- Cabinet Instability in the Fourth Republic (1946-1951)The Journal of Politics, 1952