Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- List of tables
- Notes on the contributors
- Preface
- 1 An inductive theoretical framework for coalitional behaviour: political parties in multi-dimensional perspective in Western Europe
- 2 Between theoretical elegance and political reality: deductive models and cabinet coalitions in Europe
- 3 Changing coalitional preferences among West German parties
- 4 The FDP and coalitional behaviour in the Federal Republic of Germany: multi-dimensional perspectives on the role of a pivotal party
- 5 Cabinet stability in the French Fourth Republic: the Ramadier coalition government of 1947
- 6 Coalition formation and maintenance in Belgium: a case-study of elite behaviour and changing cleavage structure, 1965–1981
- 7 The Dutch Christian Democratic party and coalitional behaviour in the Netherlands: a pivotal party in the face of depillarisation
- 8 Coalition or Fianna Fail? The politics of inter-party government in Ireland
- 9 Italy's party democracy and coalitional behaviour: a case-study in multi-dimensionality
- 10 Party coalitions in the first democratic period in Spain, 1977–1982
- 11 Coalitional theory and practice in Scandinavia
- 12 Multi-dimensional approaches to the study of local coalitions: some cross-national comparisons
- 13 Research notes
- Index
7 - The Dutch Christian Democratic party and coalitional behaviour in the Netherlands: a pivotal party in the face of depillarisation
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 November 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- List of tables
- Notes on the contributors
- Preface
- 1 An inductive theoretical framework for coalitional behaviour: political parties in multi-dimensional perspective in Western Europe
- 2 Between theoretical elegance and political reality: deductive models and cabinet coalitions in Europe
- 3 Changing coalitional preferences among West German parties
- 4 The FDP and coalitional behaviour in the Federal Republic of Germany: multi-dimensional perspectives on the role of a pivotal party
- 5 Cabinet stability in the French Fourth Republic: the Ramadier coalition government of 1947
- 6 Coalition formation and maintenance in Belgium: a case-study of elite behaviour and changing cleavage structure, 1965–1981
- 7 The Dutch Christian Democratic party and coalitional behaviour in the Netherlands: a pivotal party in the face of depillarisation
- 8 Coalition or Fianna Fail? The politics of inter-party government in Ireland
- 9 Italy's party democracy and coalitional behaviour: a case-study in multi-dimensionality
- 10 Party coalitions in the first democratic period in Spain, 1977–1982
- 11 Coalitional theory and practice in Scandinavia
- 12 Multi-dimensional approaches to the study of local coalitions: some cross-national comparisons
- 13 Research notes
- Index
Summary
The political landscape
The Dutch polity is known as a rather fragmented multi-party system. Ever since the introduction of universal suffrage and proportional representation – both in the aftermath of the First World War – the political system has been dominated by minority parties. Even the largest parties – the Catholic and the Labour parties – never gained more than one-third of the vote. In principle it allowed many coalition figurations.
The five major parties nevertheless determined the course of Dutch politics. Three of them were religious parties:
– the Calvinist ARP (Anti Revolutionary party)
– the Dutch Reformed Protestant CHU (Christian Historical Union)
– the Roman Catholic KVP (Catholic People's party).
The other two represented the secular strata of the population:
– the Liberal VVD (People's Party for Freedom and Democracy)
– the Socialist PvdA (Labour party).
The major parties were closely tied to separate social subcultures, the latter being segregated along religious and class lines. Due to the impact of the religious cleavage, neither of the two secular parties was ever able to mobilise its class base fully. The religious parties jointly controlled at least 50 per cent of the popular vote until 1967. In theory the religious parties could govern alone. But the interwar period had vindicated that the three parties did not always act in harmony.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Coalitional Behaviour in Theory and PracticeAn Inductive Model for Western Europe, pp. 145 - 170Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1986
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