Ethnic minority MPs as reputational shields? How Western European political parties respond to public opinion shifts on immigration policy

Marc Van De Wardt*, Maria Sobolewska, Patrick English

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

In recent decades, representation of ethnic minorities increased significantly across Europe, while concurrently many political parties moved to the right on multiculturalism and immigration, a seeming paradox. We explain it by arguing that often it is the same parties that move to the right and simultaneously increase representation. They use this dual strategy in an attempt to positionally converge to the median voter, where the increased minority representation acts as a reputational shield to prevent allegations of intolerance. Looking at parliaments of eight European countries between 1990 and 2015, we find that parties that shifted to the right in response to a public mood swing to the right are indeed significantly more likely to bring more ethnic minority politicians into parliament. This has important implications for the literature on descriptive representation and party platform change.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)503-520
JournalEuropean Political Science Review
Volume16
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of European Consortium for Political Research.

Funding

Results presented in this article have been obtained within the project, Pathways to Power: The Political Representation of Citizens of Immigrant Origin in Seven European Democracies (PATHWAYS)‘. This project was funded by the ANR (France), DFG (Germany), ESRC (UK) and NWO (Netherlands) under the Open Research Area (ORA+) framework. It has been joined in 2015 by a Belgian sister project funded by UCLouvain, ULB and VUB universities and the Fund of Scientific Research. The PATHWAYS consortium is formed by the University of Amsterdam (Prof. Jean Tillie), the University of Bamberg (Prof. Thomas Saalfeld), the University of Leicester (Prof. Laura Morales), and the CEVIPOF Sciences Po Paris (Prof. Manlio Cinalli). The author(s) want to explicitly acknowledge the work of the following researchers in the production of the original datasets: Pierre Baudewyns, Karen Celis, Didier Chabanet, Manlio Cinalli, Jérémy Dodeigne, Silvia Erzeel, Jorge Fernandes, Edward Fieldhouse, Lucas Geese, Simona Guerra, Anne-Sophie van Gulpen, Steven van Hauwaert, Chloé Janssen, Angeliki Konstantinidou, Cornelia Kristen, Siresa Lopez, Laura Morales, Liza Mügge, Daphne van der Pas, Constanza Sanhueza Petrarca, Jean-Benoit Pilet, Luis Ramiro, Huub Ramler, Thomas Saalfeld, Diana Schacht, Maria-Jimena Sanhueza, Carsten Schwemmer, Jean Tillie, Daniela Vintila, and Andreas M. Wüst. The authors also thank the Manifesto Core Group for their help with our queries on the ManifestoR program and to Heiko Giebler and the anonymous reviewers for their valuable feedback on the manuscript. 1

FundersFunder number
Economic and Social Research Council
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
Agence Nationale de la Recherche
Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek

    Keywords

    • descriptive representation
    • dynamic representation
    • Ethnic minorities
    • immigration issue
    • public mood shifts

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