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Shaping the (Dis)Advantage: The Impact of Partisan and Demographic Factors on Ethnic Minority Candidates’ Success in Preferential Voting Systems. Evidence from the Brussels case.

Tijdschriftbijdrage - Tijdschriftartikel

This article asks whether Turkish and North African origin candidates experience an electoral (dis)advantage in the Brussels preferential voting system. We examine the impact of candidates’ ethnicity on their intraparty share of preference votes, and whether and how the strength of this relationship is influenced by their partisan orientation and the district concentration of their own ethnic group. Our results indicate that Turkish and North African origin candidates receive higher shares of preference votes on average compared to their co-partisans. We find that North African origin candidates’ advantage does not vary according to their ethnic group concentration in the district, but their share of preference votes is higher than their co-partisans when they compete on left and center-left lists. However, Turkish origin candidates get more successful than their co-partisans as their ethnic group concentration increases, especially when they compete on left and center-left lists. Our research overall highlights the importance of candidates’ ethnicity as an information shortcut for voters in the context of intraparty competition. We conclude that strong preferential voting systems do generate more opportunities for the inclusion of ethnic minority groups, but that parties’ strategies and voters’ behavior are more determinant than the rules themselves.

Tijdschrift: Journal of Elections, Public Opinion & Parties
ISSN: 1745-7289
Issue: 1
Volume: 32
Pagina's: 22-45
Jaar van publicatie:2020
Trefwoorden:Ethnic Minorities, Preferential Voting, Political Representation, Brussels
  • ORCID: /0000-0002-7919-2871/work/112704741
  • WoS Id: 000525126000001
  • Scopus Id: 85083238392