TY - JOUR
T1 - With status decline in sight, voters turn radical right
T2 - how do experience and expectation of status decline shape electoral behaviour?
AU - Im, Zhen Jie
AU - Wass, Hanna
AU - Kantola, Anu
AU - Kauppinen, Timo M.
PY - 2023/2
Y1 - 2023/2
N2 - We distinguish between the experience and expectation of subjective status decline in relation to electoral behaviour. Studies often link support for radical parties, especially radical right ones, to voters' experience of status decline. A few other studies argue that voters' expectation of status decline also triggers radical right support. Without precise measures of both perceptions, it has been difficult to distinguish which (or both) is most relevant for radical right support in Western Europe and the USA. Using survey data from 2018 (n = 4,076) and 2020 (n = 2,106) in Finland, we could precisely measure and distinguish between voters' experience and expectation of status decline. Descriptively, voters who have experienced status decline have low income, whereas voters who expect status decline have (lower)middle income. Using multivariate analyses, we find that voters who expect status decline consistently prefer radical right parties more than voters who expect status improvement. However, there is no robust evidence of radical right support among voters who have experienced status decline. These findings suggest that the expectation, not experience, of status decline drives radical right support. If these expectations trigger radical right support in Nordic welfare states, they may be even more pertinent in less comprehensive welfare states.
AB - We distinguish between the experience and expectation of subjective status decline in relation to electoral behaviour. Studies often link support for radical parties, especially radical right ones, to voters' experience of status decline. A few other studies argue that voters' expectation of status decline also triggers radical right support. Without precise measures of both perceptions, it has been difficult to distinguish which (or both) is most relevant for radical right support in Western Europe and the USA. Using survey data from 2018 (n = 4,076) and 2020 (n = 2,106) in Finland, we could precisely measure and distinguish between voters' experience and expectation of status decline. Descriptively, voters who have experienced status decline have low income, whereas voters who expect status decline have (lower)middle income. Using multivariate analyses, we find that voters who expect status decline consistently prefer radical right parties more than voters who expect status improvement. However, there is no robust evidence of radical right support among voters who have experienced status decline. These findings suggest that the expectation, not experience, of status decline drives radical right support. If these expectations trigger radical right support in Nordic welfare states, they may be even more pertinent in less comprehensive welfare states.
KW - Radical right
KW - Status decline
KW - Status expectations
KW - Subjective social status
KW - Voting behaviour
KW - 5171 Political Science
UR - https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/european-political-science-review/article/with-status-decline-in-sight-voters-turn-radical-right-how-do-experience-and-expectation-of-status-decline-shape-electoral-behaviour/A9295A25DB4D1817C460555D351D0932
U2 - 10.1017/S1755773922000406
DO - 10.1017/S1755773922000406
M3 - Article
SN - 1755-7739
VL - 15
SP - 116
EP - 135
JO - European Political Science Review
JF - European Political Science Review
IS - 1
ER -