Comparative European Politics
The Varieties of
European Political Ideologies and Political Parties
Political Ideology as a
Left - Right Continuum
Ideas/Values that Animate the
Political Left
Ideas/Values that Animate the
Political Right
The European Ideological
Spectrum Compared to US
Broader, more varied, more nuanced
Why???
European Parties of the Left
Communists
Social
Democrats/Socialists
New Left parties
Greens
European Parties of the Center
Liberals
"Radicals"
Euroepan Parties of the
Right
Christian Democratic
parties
Conservatives
Nationalist
parties/"national fronts"/anti-Immigrant parties
Communist Parties
Historically, in the 20th
Century, strongest in Italy - PCI, now Democratic Party of the Left and the
Communist Refoundation Party
Also strong in France
Began with links to
Bolshevism, Soviet Union
By 1970s, however,
clear shift toward “Eurocommunism”, i.e., dealignment with Moscow
Mean Support for Communist
Parties
1950s: 7.9%
1990s: 3.5%
Clearly shrinking
support
Why?
1) end of Cold War
2) shift to Eurocommunism made them indistinguishable from Social Dems and
other New Left parties
3) changes in European society, economies
i.e., shift to post-industrialism
rise of post-materialist values
(Inglehart)
necessitates electoral realignment
in the electorate, party system (Kitschelt)
Social
Democrats
The most successful
party type in post-war Europe, 1950s-2000 – why??
General Trend 1990s
onward: support shrinking.
1950s mean 33.6%; 1990s
mean 29.9%
Strongest support in:
Scandinavia, Austria, Germany, UK (Labour Party)
Definitely, appears to
have an Anglo-Saxon/Scand bent here – why??
Also strong in:
BENELUX, Fin, France, Italy
Roots in workers’ movements,
trade unionist movement (UK esp), “radicalism”
Perhaps this is why support
for the party is in decline? Traditional constituency is shrinking???
Or, is it because of move
to center???
Two sides of same coin??
New Left
Parties
Strongest in Denmark,
Iceland, Norway
Example: Red-Green Alliance in Denmark
Scandianvian phenomenon – there 7-8 %
Mean across all countries
much less – 1.5-2% over 1960s-1990s pd
What’s different about the
“new left”?
Like “old left” in that
they oppose market forces, and support public ownership, controlled economy,
appeal to working class.
Support welfare state,
social justice, ecological movement.
Different in their emphasis
on libertarian ideas of freedom and participatory democracy. Share this
with the Greens.
Oppose greater European integration (a capitalist invention; neo-liberalism)
Green Parties
Most transnationally
organized
Strongest in Belgium,
France, Luxembourg, Finland
Second tier Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Netherlands but
note in Government coalition in Germany – their share of the vote increased in
2002 Ger elections to 7.5%
General Trend:
New in 80s but increasing into the 90s. 1980s mean: 2%; 1990s mean: 4.1%
What Greens stand
for: Social justice, critical of large scale capitalist, resource
intensive developmet; for
localism, organic growing, non-GMO food; equal treatment of women, racial and
ethnic minorities, participatory democracy (including party structures –
anti-hierarchy). Skeptical about further European integration.
Liberals
General Trend:
Gaining; 1990s just over 10% mean support
Libertarian strand
gaining in Europe
Strong in: the Netherlands - D66, Liberal Party;
(Note: individualist bent in political cultures in these)
Over 20% in all these.
Also important in UK - The Liberal
Democrats; Germany - Free Democrats (FDP)
Some presence: France
(UDF); Germany (FDP); Sweden ( Moderate Party; Liberal Party)
Often play important role in coalition governments.
Libertarian with a left-lean: Freedom, democracy, decentralization,
social justice, individual rights and freedom.
Share commitment to
welfarism, environmental protection.
Have picked up vote as
traditional left has lost them
Agrarian-Center Parties
General Trend:
constant over 1960s-1990s
About 6.5%
But much higher in Den, Fin, Ice, Switz
Agrarian populist, national, pro-farmer price support parties different from
center parties - Tend to play a role as mediator, bridge, coalition partner
"between" other more classically left and right parties.
Christian
Democrats
Largest group of the
center-right
General trend:
losing support over post-war period
16 country mean:
1950s mean: 20.7%
1990s mean: 14.5%
Strongest in:
Germany, Luxembourg
Also strong in: Austria, Belg, Ireland, Netherlands
Was THE ruling party in Italy until massive corruption scandal in the 90s –
dropped from averages over 36% to only 18% in the 1990s
The winner – Forza Italia –
new center right, nationalist coalition
Note: strongest in
countries with history of Catholic mass mobilization, “confessional” parties at
turn-of-the-century (19th-20th)
But in Germany and
Netherlands, e.g., a blending of Catholic and Protestant forces
Newer phenomenon in Ireland
(Fine Gael – taking on this role)
What they stand for:
State-oriented – support strong welfare state - now
weakening/"reform" minded
Crucial difference between the US and European center-right
Why???
Strong advocates of
European integration
Why??
Cultural/religious agenda
here??
Distinguished from
"conservatives" and more nationalist parties on both these grounds
Conservatives
Support neutral over
post-war period – about 18% throughout
Most important in UK,
Fianna Fail in Ireland, Independence party in Iceland
Forza Italia, in Italy
**Note: where secular
conservatism strong, Christian democracy weak or non-existent; and vice versa.
What they stand for:
Some degree of support to welfare state but lower priority than for others on
the right. Stronger emphasis on private enterprise, fiscal austerity, gov’t
efficiency, law and order, trad’l national values, ambiguous toward European
integration.
In other words, they are
more like our right leaners in the US.
Nationalist
Parties
Small but
growing support in several countries over the 1990s
less than 15% of national vote but strong majorities in some regions
UK Scottish
National Party, Plaid Cymru, Sinn Fein, Ulster Unionist Party
More
xenophonic, anti-immigrant versions in
Germany - The Republikaners, France - The National Front, Belgium - Vlamms
Bloc, Netherlands - Pim Fortuyn Party, Italy - National Alliance Party
Complicating
the Model: The Libertarian/Authoritarian Dimension
In response
to rise of "left-libertarian" parties, collapse of "the old
Left"
Link to politicalcompass.org