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Was Duverger Correct? Single-Member District Election Outcomes in Fifty-three Countries
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 August 2012
Abstract
In districts where only one seat is contested, the electoral formula (plurality or majority) should be a major determinant of the number of parties that receive votes. Specifically, plurality rule should generate two-party competition while other institutional arrangements should generate electoral fragmentation. Yet tests of these propositions using district-level data have focused on a limited number of cases; they rarely contrast different electoral systems and have reached mixed conclusions. This study analyses district-level data from 6,745 single-member district election contests from 53 democratic countries to test the evidence for Duverger's Law and Hypothesis. Double-ballot majoritarian systems have large numbers of candidates, as predicted, but while the average outcome under plurality rule is generally consistent with two-party competition, it is not perfectly so. The two largest parties typically dominate the districts (generally receiving more than 90 per cent of the vote), and there is very little support for parties finishing fourth or worse. Yet third-place parties do not completely disappear, and ethnic divisions shape party fragmentation levels, even under plurality rule. Finally, institutional rules that generate multiparty systems elsewhere in the country increase electoral fragmentation in single-member plurality districts.
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Footnotes
Department of Political Science, University of Connecticut (email: [email protected]). The author thanks Ethan Scheiner, Rob Moser and Laura Stephenson for comments on previous drafts and claims responsibility for all errors. An online appendix is available at http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0007123412000233. Supplementary materials are available at the author's website http://www.polisci.uconn.edu/people/faculty/faculty.php?name=singer. Replication data are available via email.
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78 Moreover, the model provides no evidence in the initial specification that size or federalism raises fragmentation generally in FPTP countries, so we cannot attribute the different outcomes in Canada, India or the UK to these characteristics.
79 Grofman, Blais and Bowler, Duverger's Law of Plurality Voting uses the standard of whether votes for parties outside the top two parties were greater than the margin of victory to identify districts in which strategic voting potentially could have swung the election (which is equivalent to asking if the winner got a majority of the vote) and thus to diagnose coordination failures. However, this only defines an upper limit on the number of cases in which strategic behaviour could change the outcome. In some of these cases, small party voters may have been indifferent between the top two or preferred the winner, meaning that strategic behaviour would have left the outcome unchanged.
80 The third-place party was only bigger than the margin between the top two parties in 1.4 per cent of American districts, but could have swung the election in 30 per cent of the districts in Canada, 36 per cent of the districts in the UK, 43 per cent of the districts in India or Zambia, and 75 per cent of the districts in Nepal.
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83 The TF coefficient is significant at 0.05 in the results presented in online appendix 9; it is significant at the 0.10 level here.
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85 See online appendix 9.
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93 Support for the first, second, third and remaining parties averages 46-30-11-12 in MMP districts, 46-30-12-11 in PR districts and 49-30-13-7 in Canada, India and the UK.
94 The top two parties receive 90 per cent or more of the vote 72 per cent of the time in plurality elections outside of Canada, India and the UK, compared to 32 per cent of the time in mixed systems, 18 per cent of the time in Canada, India and the UK, and less than 1 per cent of districts under majority rule.
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